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Show FULL ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES 75vertise in the UTAH WEATHER FORECAST EXAMINER IF f IT II TU. mmici IT CHARGES. MEDIUM f0! ADVSRTIWNQ THE EXAMINER CITY. Tt!I " lull THE CO0UR SUBSCRIP- TO A 0N 0;H.OoSt Iertisere. vni WELL A IV YL CLOUDY SUNDAY; LOCAL SHOWERS IN NORTH PORTION. MONDAY FAIR. OGDEN CITY. UTAH. SUNDAY MORNING. 8 BY THE INTERSTATE t t a f For Report Has Been Completed long Looked Says That the Law Only Prevents the Concentration Into Hard- man's Hands of Every Railroad Between Canada and Mexico , Because 1 I m . trans-contl-eut- al a trans-continent- ... i JtT Z g" Har-rima- d 'Vt . w -- demand-jepresfntaU- com-Wtiks- 'i. f cumpa-connecti- Lands Undeveloped the Funds Were Invested in Stocks. Wuhlngtun, July IS. A report wu purpose of forming through routes of Including branches and gal, ptbllo today fety he Interstate transportation feeders. , Its surplus fundi, says the of lie eommltilon Inquiry report, should be used far the betterCoBomr teto railroad operations of Edward H. ment at Its lines and In extensions. HuHmuil and of the operations of In conclusion the report aaya; ito wcaHed Harrlman llnea of rail-n- j Competition between railways as itlcb haa been In progress for well aa between other industries Is the imnl nionthi. The report which wu established policy of the nation. And writtca hr Commlieloner Franklin K. while the acquisition of small minorUh, to the unanlmoue exprraaion of ity stock of a competing line might The ibe commission. report wai not decrease the competition yet the Roosevelt acquisition of any considerable amount inumltled to Preaident ml the department of Juatice. It la of atock with representation on the that it hoard of directors of such railway expend by the eommlaalon ilH tt determined by the president unquestionably haa the effect of diml Attorney General Bonaparte from minishing competition and lessening Si astemeuts tent out in the report! to the extent It a effectiveness. The dwtber the government will institute time haa coma when aome regulation nr sort of proceedings against Mr. should be Imposed upon the Issuance Hirrtniia or the corporation involve of securities by. railroads engaged In h Ike Inquiry. No recommendation! Interstate commerce and in the opineommlasKni that any ion of the eommlaalon such regulation n aid by the indill r criminal prosecutions be will tend to make securities safer and state! ai a result of its inquiry. more arenre for investments and Tke report la an exhaustive nummary therefor benefit not only the rall-it the evidence adduced at the sev- roads but the public." en! bearings held fcv the commlaaloa The Harriman Policy. In tke fluvse of its Inquiry, It enters ' Within three yean after the reorfully into a discussion of the policy perilled ky Mr. Harrlman In obtaining ganisation of the Union Pacific railwd mslatalnlng control aT the various road company Is 1887, fir, Edward H. Harriman became the dominating Him of railway in the Harrlman aya-ud presents a fairly complete spirit la that corporation. Aa chair mag of the' executive committee, he kUbry of the opinions of the various km Txcerpo from the verbatim exercises powers that are well nigh Mtnoayof Mr. Harrlman are given abeolute. The directors have delegatBov, as stated In the report, "that ed their power to manage and direct k b oaiy the law which prevents the all the business and affairs of the comIn Mr. Harrimani pany to an executive committee of five oomtratlng haadi of every railroad line lying be-- . members, who shall act "In such manCanada and Mexico," Is the ner as such committee shall deem beat fruk idmiosloa of Mr. Harrlman him-e- lf for the companys Interest In nil cases . In which node at the hearing. apedfle directions shall not Together under one head all exist-h- g have been given by the board," and. transcontinental linen and as In turn, the chairman of the executive ay ai possible" end to exclude all committee la authorised to represent oocpetUori. The Harrlman avetem that body when It la not In session. vk taaugu rated In 1905 with the Accordingly, we find that. In 1908, Mr. maintenance of convertible Harriman waa authorised to borrow kndi by the Union Pacific. such sums of money aa may be Ve-- q Control of Competing Lines. ul red for the uses of this company, Mr. Harrlmans eventual control of and to execute In the nemo and on behalf of this company n note or notes any of the competing lines was prevented, It la point-- d for the amounts borrowed." The inoat, by the supreme courts vestigation showed that In practically la the Northern Securities-case- , all the great transactions of this comk a iWn by the report that It haa pany, Mr. Harrlman, aa chairman of lot baen the Harrlman policy to per-- t the executive committee, acted upon the properties brought under tale own Initiative and hla nets were taka Pacific control to decline as la subsequently ratified and approved by wT ease they are better today than the executive committee. It may fairtoey were when Mr. Harrlman ly be said, therefore, that the policies them. and purposes of the Uunion - Pacific Partlrular atreae la laid have been those of Mr. Harriman. by the on the elimination of coropeti-f- r' Trips Harriman May Taka. M bualnen , Mr. Harriman may Journey by UwBI the Harrlman lines and the from New York to New msalulon Indicatea that that la the steamship' rail to Ban Franthence Orleans, Rhr of large significance developed cisco, across theby Pacific ocean to lt territory. ... Chinn and returning by another route Spatial reference la made to the to the United States, may go to Ogin which Mr. Harrlman' secured Utah, by any one of three rail Wnd of the San Pedro road and the den, Maes, and thence to Kansas City or aanipulatlon of the Chicago and. Al- Omaha, without leaving the deck or of ..the platform of n carrier which he con,TrJ careful uncial ope rations insynopsis both Instances trol! and without duplicating any w.ng given. Concerning the Chicago part of hla Journey. d Alton trannaction the commission - He haa further what appears to be n 'yi: dominating control in the Hllnoie CenEmitted by Mr. Harrlman tral railroad, running directly north wa 'era about sixty millions from the Gulf of Mexico to the great J d liabilities Issued against lakes, paralleling the Mississippi- - rivProperty had been acquired er; and 8,000 miles west of the Illinois accurate Central he controls the only line of wSmrte"8 UQd0Ubtoi'y railroad running from the Columbia file commission further aaya con-- river to the Mexican border. the Alton deal that It la evl-.7- ? Within a year hie apace of influence 5" 11 w,torr HcM In bus extended eastward; the Union Pamethde of indefenal- - cific and Oregon Short Line have acquired 18.68 per cent of the stock of Its conclusion the Commission the Baltimore A Ohio at a coat of 145,466,960, and have invested 919,634, effect of the control of the 824 in New York Central A Hudson Pacific by the Union Pacific River stock. ?jmern Wen to unify and amalgamate the Only the Law Stops Him. "roSUL6?.1 an tte,e two That It la only the law which preto eliminate com-a- vents' the concentration Into Mr. w hlpJlne ndtlle,n n wJwet,B hands of every railroad line in business to lying between Canada and Mexico is 'oriental ports. the frank admission of Mr. Harriman n- ?nt,5ntr,,l 01 the Alton rail- - himself, made at the hearing. l,n 00 Paclnc and the Chi-- r To get under one head nil existing d Pacific Rall- - Iran l8!and lines or aa many as undoubtedly ellml-b- possible and to exclude the incoming the Alton of nil competitors became manifestly 'wt'aeen Chicago, the Harriman policy, which was Inand Kansas augurated In 1901 by the Issuance of ar cwiaplcuouaCity." 1 TJ illustrations 1100.000,000 of convertible bonds by of Interests- - and tbe Union Pacific. With the proceeds of management" which Mr. of these bonda the Union Pacific purwhen he chased control of the Southern Pacific upon the Santa Fe company and n majority of the outatnek of the Northern Pacific L'Hr,P0,icE 01 Purchasing and standing rallroal company which Inter Incin con,PtinS lines dentally carried with It control of one-hal- f contlnu,! t must mean of the stock of tbe Chicago, BurU pi competition. i Wendatioos lington A Quincy railway company, of Commission. the stork of which has been purchased Pndtloni of the conjointly by the Northern Pacific and mnpe Prneral than Great Northern companies and their uPPUcaUon say collateral trout bonds iaaned therefor. to Ike lnr7n, o! a railroad corpori Possession of "ro these lines would have TOnl,Brt to the furnish- of to the Union Pacific absolute given Ufcfi iw?,"1 rtatjon and that rall- over every avenue leading to to ln--r mastery Pnnltted groTnl coast within the United the Pacific n th securities nr States, save that afforded by the Croat h eioJ-tnI aleamahlp Northern on the northern border of ,' iine for the tbe country and that offared by the Santa Fe on the southern. This plan, If executed, would have subjected to a common will and policy nearly of the territory of the United States a comparatively undeveloped, one-ha- lf rapidly growing and extremely rich territory into which must neoeasarlly extend the population and business of the eastern states. Properties Not Allowed to Decline. It haa been, however, go part of the Harriman policy to permit the properties which were brought under the Union Pacific control, to degenarw ate and decline; aa railroads they are better property today with lower grades, atraighter tracks and more nmple equipment than they were when they came under that control Large eama have been generously expended In the carrying on of engineer lug works and betterments, which make for the Improvement of the service, and permanent value of the prop- erty. The control of the Northwestern Pacific and the Burlington by the Union Pacific was prevented by the decision of the supreme court of the United States in the ease of Hgrrimatf versus Northern Becurltlvs- - company, la which that court held that It would ba in violation of (ho Sherman net for the Union Pacific to control those railways, as they were competing llnea The Southern Pacific remains within the control of tbe Union Pacific. Purchase of Stock by. Union Pacific. In all of its acquisition id stock control In other railroads, the Union Pacific has either purchased the stocks directly Itself or through the Oregon Short Line Railroad company, which it owns and controls, and which, for the purposes of this report, will be considered as ths4'nlmr Pacific. In tbe year 1901, tfas Union Pacific acquired 750,000 shares out of a total of 1,978,493 ahares of Southern Pacific stock and subsequently acquiring 150.000 shares, making a total of 900,-00-0 aharea or 45.49 per emt of the total stock issue of the Southern Pacific company. Thereafter, when the preferred atock of the Southern Pacific waa Issued, the Union Pacific ubecrlbed for Us proportion, to wit: 180.000 shares out of a total of 895,688 shares; so that st.thn present time the Union Pacific owns 1,080,000 hares out' of a total of 8,374,180 . . shares. Holdings of the Southern Pacific. Tha Southern Pacific company Is a holding corporation. - It waa organised under n special charter of the elate of Kentucky In 1884, and was authorised to acquire bv purchase, or otherwise, the atocka, 'bonds and securities of railway and . steamship companies. Shortly after Its organisation It acquired the stocks of and controlled, and still does own the stocks and control, n system of railroads extending from Ogden, Utah, where It connects wkh the Union Pacific to San Francisco; from San Francisco to Port, land; and from San Francisco through California, Arisons, New Mexico, Texas, and Louisiana to New Orleans; and has since acquired a line of steamships from Galveston and from New Orleans to New York1 and Havana. It Is unnecessary to detail each separate' railway corporation owning the sections of the various lines In these states; It Is suffident to say that through stock It controls the entire Southern Pacific system Commonly knows ns tha Sunset route. Of these lines tbe Union Pacific haa a lease and owns the stocks; of other llnea, notably Texas lines, it la simply a stockholding company, and controls them in that way. Old Central Pacific Line From Ogdsn. Among these llnea to owned and controlled la the Central Pacific Railroad company, organised under the laws of California, whlchwlth tha Western Pacific company (which was Iso organised under the laws of California and subsequently consolidated with It), constructed the line from San Francisco to Ogden, where It connected with the Union Pacific. This la the line originally known ns the Central Pacific, which was to be opsuberated with the Union Pacific, itRoes-vllle from line the acquired sequently to California, Sacramento), (near the Oregon utato line, which was constructed by the California A. Oregon Railroad company, organised ondr the taws bf California. Tbe California OreA Oregon Railroad company, of Portgon jconatructed the line from which land to the California state line, The company still owns that line. Central Pacific company, therefore, owns the line extending from Ogden to San Francisco and the line frontit Roseville to the Oregon stale line, capital stock 0 value of common atock, and I1I.8W.-00- is which of all of preferred stock, comowned by the Southern Pacific com pany; and the Southern Pacific . bus JULY O O JAPS O HADE AGAINGT fiECOMMENDATIONS illustra-Waknuirin- 1 AND OGDEN STANDARD 195 NO, THE INDICATIONS ARE THAT THE WEATHER WILL BE PART. i O O O O O O O O O O O O O O H, PRICE FIVE CENTS 1907 the defense he swore that Orchard naa la Wallace la August ud July of 19u4. it wu at this time that tha late claims and Orchard himself aaya O SKETCH FORTIFICA- - O O TIONS. Msahlngtnn, July IS. The department today took steps to ascertain the facie lu relation to the reported arraot of Japa- nese at Fort Roaecrans, ('all- fornla. for making drawings and bine prints of the fort. Major Gatchell, In command at that point, baa up to this time failed to notify the department of what has takes place. At the stale department it was announced that no new a had been received in regard to the matter. o OOOOOO he 8 CASE HAS O O O O O centrator. Disprove o o Win. Dewey Confesses 00 ooooooo . u Orchard's movements In North Idaho ud to the disposal of hla tatsieat In (ho Hercules ailna. One of the moat wltnesaea waa August Interesting Paulsen who waa at on time a poor miner in tbo Couar d'Ataoea and a partner of Orchard In Infho. Hercules mine. He retained hla tomat in the Hercules for five years until the mine became one of the beat properties in Ortha country and la now wealthy. kid-up chard swore that ho planned to Paulsen's child and extort a ransom of 1 30,000. The coup did not come off. Paulaen wu called at this time to show that Orchard disposed of hla Interest In the mine some time before ho left the state. Paulsen will be recalled la tar. Counsel for the state aspect to finish (he rebuttal by Tuesday eventac or Wednesday at (ho latest. u to Participation in Destruction of Bonier Hill Boise. Idaho, July It. fiansatioa followed sensation quickly la the Haywood trial today when tha state commenced Its rebuttal evidence, (hie witness on tha stand confessed to participation In a labor riot resulting in the death of two men, the recced of conviction of murder In the second degree of a witness for (he defense waa Introduced and the proof of another having Iwts sent to the Insane asylum upon the Information of hi. neighbors waa offered, tta admissibility wu argued and the decision of tha court will be handed down on Monday morning. Finally, shortly after court adjourned for the day.i Information waa swore to and a warrant for perjury Issued In a magistrates court against Dr. I. L. McGee, a physician of Wallace, Idaho, who was one for the defense In of tha witness the discrediting of Orchard. Tha warrant waa placed In the handa of Sheriff Hodgln of Ada county, who at ones telcgraphrd the authorities at home to make the arrest. Deway Sprung Sensation. A crowded court room, aomewbat common piece, sprang bored by to mralned attention at the rkwe of the second cession of At Haywood trial today when William Dewey, n witness in rebuttal tor the state, eon--f eased to active armed parti cl pa (too in tbs destruction of the Bunker H1U and Sullivan concentrator at Wardner on April 29, 1896, whan two men were killed and a mob of a thousand man participated in the riot. Harry Orchard commenced hts series of great crime at Wardner. He confemd to lighting one of the fuses that started the explosion, and ba swore tbat William Davis, known among hla fellows aa Big Bill" Daria, led tha mob. Corcoran Triad and Convicted. Witnesses for the defense have worn that Orchard was not at Ward-ne- r on April 89. Baris himself has worn to haring been elsewhere ud positively denied uy connection with the crime for complicity In which Pul Corcoran waa tried ud convicted and aome ten or a doaen men. Including Daria himself .were Indicted by (he grand Jurv. Daria on the stand admitted that he went Into hiding lmme-lately after the rioting commenced. Speaks After Eight Yea re Sllenea. Eight years have now elapsed qlpce that day of rioting, tha consequences of which waa the calling out of the United SUfca troops at the request of Governor Steunenberg, the establishment of the military bull pea" and the foundation wu laid, according to ihe prosecution, in tbe present trials for the anlmua on tbe pert of tbe Western Federation of Miners against assssl-nstlo- u Steunenberg resulting In hia by Orchard.' From that time on no eye witness except Orchard haa been found- to tell the story or Incriminate himself until thla afternoon, when Dewey, now a resident of Goldfield, Col, made hla confession. With eyes downcast; ud fingers nervously picking at the braiding around the rim of a grey sombrero. waa Dewey told It an. Repeatedly he with and voice hla raise to requested quick glance at counsel he complied, Inaudionly to sink back Into almost ble tones. Under the provocation of by HI F. sneering cross examination even beRichardson be rallied and came combative, but throughput the recital be gave evidence of a certain remorse. Under Croce Examination. Under the croea examination he told why he had come to Boise to confess at thla tima after eight years la of alienee. He hu been a minerHOP Colorado for neven years, ba said, rehad even risen sufficiently la the tard of the other men to be eleclei Dewey town marshal of Goldfield. left Jbe stand a few minutes before tbe regular hour of adjournment. He la a tall, loose Jointed man with deep eyes end a great Roman nose, dogbut ged ud determined la manner, out with a sense of humor that came occasionally while he was stud. Mr. Hawley, who la conducting the rebuttal examination, blunt and not might forward himself, does any spare one of hia own wltnesaea side. more than those of tha other When Dewey dropped hla voice at one period of the examination by the prosecution he was chewing a quill tooth pick and leuing back in his chair, llawlev broke In ud shouted: Speak up. Mr. Dewey; take that tooth pick out of your mouth and alt i f T 1 1 PROHIBITION IN GEORGIA. Atlanta, Ga, July 18 The Hud-ma- a Covington bill to prohibit the aalo or manufacture f liquor in Georgia after January 1, 1908, passed the sea-a- te today. . TALK OF Mo-Kea- 'a - arid-tratln- Orhcard's fitatomsots. Tea witnesses In rebuttal wore examined today. Moat of thorn were called to disprove statements at to O estah-llehme- y McGee waa also one of the witnesses who swore that Orchard vru at Mullau oo the day of the explosion at the Bunker Hill ud Sullivan con- O O O O ly ta-da- 19U4. O RECEIVED -- One of the witnesses that Orchard wu at hit hole! In Denver In July or August of awtu-- e APOSTOLIC aimul-taneous- in Denver planning the Ibad-l-y murder. O O DELEGATE. Indianapolis, Xnd.; July IS. The arrival of Monsignor Diomede Falcon lo, apostolic delegate to the United States, bearing the blessing of Pope Plus X to the convention of American Federation of Catholic societies, was tha opening event of the series which will mark tha gathering of 306 delepany also has n lease of its line. It gatee representing two millions. Nearwaa only tha line from Ogden to Ban ly every state in the union, Hawaii, Francisco, however, which waa re- Cuba and Porto Rico, will bo reprequired by act of congress to be operat- sented. a number of questions of ed In ccnnectlon with the Union Pa- groat Importance to churrh ud laycific. men will come before the convention. Immediately, however, upon the Among the Important visitors will be purchase of tbe Southern Pacific com- Archbishops Mesanier of Milwaukee, panys stock ,the Unta Pacific began Blank of New Orleans and Glen nun of the unification of the two organisaSL Louis. tions and tha excretae of a control The first gathering vlU be tomorrow over tke Southern Pacific, which haa at the cathedral. The sermon will be effected a substantial elimination of by Archbishop Blank. Addresses of competition between these two lines. welcome and responses will Ire made of tha Pacifica. tomorrow night. The Union Pacific and Oregon Short Lino have at each annual meeting of the stockholders of the Bout hern Pacific, nines 1802, voted a majority of tha stock represented at anch meetings and have elected the directors and other officers. For several years last past the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific hav: Imd a majority of common directors, tie mine president, vice preaident, director of traffic, director- of "maintenance and operation, secretary, treasurer, comptroller, auditor, legal department and other chief officials.. Whereas., fortnetiythe two companies had' aemtli coRmrerclid agents in the principal cities throughout the United 8talee, traffic soliciting (Continued on Pugs' Three.) The Hague, July It. Notwithstanding the pessimistic views held In sums HARRIMANS STATEMENT, quarters concerning the peace conference and Its work, tbe members of Sajre the Report Is Political the American delegation feel confident Document (hat soma good result will be reached New York. July IS. Mr. In the exchanges of opinion among the Harriman, apeakttig by teleplenipotentiaries of the countries repArden from phone tonight resented. .said: It now appears that all of tbe Amer-lcs- a From what I am told, the propositions will be favorably reto a political document .report ceived. - Tha question of tha immunity and part of a personal pursuit of private property at sea, although of me.. The tone of the report bitterly opposed, will have a considand the method of l(a promulerable majority In the vote next week show I a (hat gation imagine further step ud title will be another court or any Judicial body the adoption of this principle toward of Its decisions ending coplrs In an other conference. The rules rearound secretly to newspaper garding tha bombardment of unfortl-- ' . publishers, Is In advance an-fled towns, villages, etc., originally der pledge to publish it presented by America; will be subSunday morning. stantially adopted with the approval That Is what the commission of the proposal drawn up by the Italdid. Their opinion was put In ia ndelegallon bringing Into harmony several days ago ud type the different views on the subject. to aeut newspapers throughThe suggestion regarding the collecout the country with the tion of pecuniary contracture! debts printed instructions In bold without the use of force will be suptype at the head; Confideported by all the great powers ud ntial To all newspapers. This the proposals concerning the a report Is released for publicaof a supreme court' of tion on Sunday morning, July and the prohibition of the use 14. 1907, and not before. of unnecessarily cruel bullets haa It Is deemed good politics been favorably received. to attack me. But I can stand Permanency of tha Conference. much better than the people In a plenary sitting, the Finally, of the country can stand that United States will present a plan for part of procedure on the part tha permanency of tha conference Itof the government tribunals as aa Institution, the holding of self charged with the duty of fm- -. meetings ud the organisaperiodic partially administering the tion of a programme. laws. The Dutch peace league la organisI shah study it carefully ing an Imposing demonstration on the have something to say occasion of the Inauguration uf Anud about It. later. But from wbat drew Carnegies palace of peace. The I am told it Is full of strange will Include en allegorical programme misstatements of fact For representing all the peoples procession example, In reference to the of tbe world passing before tbe altar Chicago and Alton, It aaya of pence and renouncing their enmithat 1 canard about 18.000,000 ties. About 1.500 persona will take to be credited to construction In the procession ud it to expart expenditures in order to find pected that about 25,00 spectators will excuse for borrowing be present money to pay dividends. Aa Tbe American proposition relating a matter of fact, that wu a to ships of war reads: written recommendation by "A war ship must be commanded by Preaident Felton when I waa commissioned officer, with a crew a In Alaska and It was adopted subject to military law and discipline. In time of war no merchutman can by the board of directors at a be transferred Into a war ship, except meeting at which I wu not present. Again it to said that It be commanded ud equipped as a certain method of accountsuch before sailing and This transformation can only occur In the terriing that waa carried out would have the effect of covering up torial waters of the state where the owner of the vessel is a subject, or in (he payment of the special territorial waters under tbe effective dividend, thereby intimating some wrongful concealment control of the military forces of anch This la a moat extraordinary a state." Another American Proposition. statement, for the writer, of American Another proposition the report to make fhen it Is conaldcred that the stockstates, first, that arms of war, ammuholders necessarily knew of nition, provisions afcd objects only the dividend because every employed for military purpises or milform absolute one received his share and itary establishments contraband of war; second, tbat condL when it was published in tional contraband consists in provievery financial paper Journal at the time ud was reported sions, material and object employed to (he stock exchange ud both In peace and par and which because of their character, special qualshown on Its printed lints. The necea-aar- y suggestion therefore of any ity or quantity are considered for military purposed ud are deswrong or dvnlre tor cocealment tined to the armed forces or the milila most unfair. I am informed that those tary establishments of tne enemy: who have examined It more third, that a list of objects ud materf ala to be included in either of said carefully say the article Is full of errors u glaring and categories must be published by the Inexcusable as these, but I belligerents ud notification of such must be made to neutrals or thrlr dipshall read It carefully and lomatic representatives. make a full statement about The capture or confiscation of conit. particularly of my connectraband. the proposition states, cantion with the Chicago and not occur until such notification haa Alton readjustm-.n- l la a few been made. days." wu ' A WAR IN , 8 J f 1 r Victoria, B. C, July IE Officers of the steamer Tartar, which arrived today from Japan, reported font muck sold- - Dewey. strtagMen-In- g . I 4 I Japan - Coant Okuma, with whom Count Itagakt formed a coalition government years ago, also advocate store meaa--! urea in an interview published by the J1 Ji Shlmpo. lie says Japan has become a power and relatione with America are on n footing befitting her new position, and the tenJvncy to treat Japanese aa an inferior people must not be tolerated. Financial Depression In Yokohama. Victoria, B. C, July 1L A flnuctal depression wae being severely felt when the ateemer Tartar, which arrived today, left Yokohama, on Jue 29. A meeting of the members of eight of the moat prominent banka of Japan wu held shortly before tke Tartar ailed, for the purpose of deviaiag mrua to check the depression. The government had redeemed treasury bills, recognized nationalised railway shares aa negotiable areurities. and paid approximate Interest on theae, but the banks considered- a more drastic course should be adopted. A combination of the banka la being made to guarantee each other against of Tuna Inspired by the pax-- . lc, resultant from tbo financial Repression. . 1 . t 1 ' K the-resu- BRIDGE COMPANY FINED. Washington, July 13. The Penn Bridge company, which la constructing a bridge In this city, paid fines aggregating I1J00 in police court today for violation of the right-hou- r taw. I . 0000000000000009 o o o o o o o o o o o o UP.M himself lu the chair, "but I would like to have a drink of wuter." It waa given to Mm by one of Haywood's counsel. Doctor Charged With Perjury. Dr. I. I. McGee, against whom a warrant for perjury waa laaued thla afternoon. Is a wealthy resident of v-- at one time be conducted a hospital there. - la his testimony for I I f o, d All right. . eacttmout prevailed when Hw ataamer left Yokohama, in eoaaoqueue of tbo Ituatloa that had arisen regarding the United States. Many Interviews were published in the Japanese press, muy of them extremely Jingoistic. Gout ItagakL formerly home minister and prominent Japanese statesTo-klman, la an Interview published at aald: Warships Gbould Be Mustered. Warships should ba mustered In Toklo Bay and Japan should confront America la solving this question by presenting an atltade to meet Americana in fire forthwith. If they reject the Just sad legitimate demands ot practiced together In When Caifeoun Ga. went north to become a millionaire trolley magnate. King Upon remained at home. learning that Calhoun waa In serious trouble he hastened west to give him aid. .f I O O O O o o o o o oooooooooooooooo V: ; |