JJtofttfttgjr Jji ) VOL. XLVI XO. 14,441. PORTLAND, OREGOX, THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1907. PRICE FIVE CENTS. V CINS ARE ISSUED Tell Story Only Equal to That of Tweed RUEF HAS LARGEST SHARE Other Revelations Involve Mil lionaire Magnates of Wall Street. RUEF RAPIDLY WEAKENS Schmitz Will Call on Harriman for Help in Distress. BOARD OF WORKS IS NEXT Astounding Condition Exists There. How Heney and Burns Csed Slight Leverage to Lift Lid From Festering Mass. SAX FRANCISCO. March 30. (Special.) Sixty-five indictments were filed by the grand Jury today against Abe Ruef and 10 against T. V. Halsey, of tlie Pacific States Telephone Company. They all 'large bribery. Assistant District Attor ney Heney and Federal Agent Burns as sert that it la only a beginning. The total amount represented In the indictments is $21S,750. When to this is . idded the amount which went to Ruef and Schmitz, the total will reach !,000, OOfl in five deals exposed today. Involve Jew York Magnates. . There are more deals of which the pub lic has small conception. They include not only local magnates, but men who have mansions lu New York, who have trafficked for special private gains in San Francisco for their corporations. It is understood that a power in Wall street who recently testified before the Inter state Commerce Commission will be given an opportunity to defend himself. Tonight Kucf and Schmitz are abject and forlorn. The entire Board of Super visors has confessed, fn'hmiti: is ready to do the same. Ruef is awakening rapid ly. By the end of next week the in dictments which will confront him will be mountain high. Hy that time it is expected that Ruef will offer to confess. The case against the grafters has grown so in strength within the last 24 hours that the evidence at hand is con sidered sufficient to bring about the In dictment and conviction of a galaxy of millionaires. Ruef Vainly Trios to Jest. Ruef presented a sorry figure in his room at the St. Francis Hotel tonight. He tried to lest. "These supposed confessions don't af fect me." he said. "It is claimed that I paid the money to Gallagher. -Well, then Gallagher did the bribing. That lets me out." Ruef knows that all his friends have de erted him. Gallagher was taken into Ruef's room with a detective and there, in the presence of the detective, informed Ruef that he had confessed. The shock blanched Ruef's cheeks and he grabbed the arms of his chair to steady himself. Then he rallied quickly. "Well. Jim." he said to Gallagher, "you're a great Jester. Did you tell tliem about that J10.0oo.rtiO we got for burning the city last April?" The human agony in' Ruef's Jests was pitiful to behold, and Gallagher was led from the room. f-elmiiu Calls for llarrinian's Aid. Mayor Schmitz. when informed of the exposures, hurried to the home of Wil liam F. Herrin, chief counsel of the Southern Pacific, with whom ha held an extended conference. 'Then he returned to his home and was closeted with his attorneys far into the night. He refused to make a statement, speaking In a voice remarkable for its composure. Schmitz has served notice on Harriman and Herrlnof the Southern Pacific that he expects them to come to his assistance. At the time of the April Are Harriman . me to San Francisco and offered to ! help the Mayor., and in return demanded that Schmitz give him all the trackage he desired In and around San Francisco. Schmitz consented and signed franchises for Harriman with as much speed as he could command. Now he has ' notified Harriman that he must extend a helping arm or be dragged down. Double Cross on Telephone Lines. The most sensational testimony to come to the grand Jury' was that of E T. Fimroer, former auditor of the Pa SHEAVES cific States Telephone Company. The witness told the grand jury that he had received orders from Manager Louis Glass, of the company, to pass as cor rect the accounts of Theodore Halsey. It was brought out through other witnesses that Halsey had rented apartments in the Mills building in April of last year and had taken the Supervisors there and had given them S50U0 apiece. Ten offi cials were thus purchased. It was brought out also that these Supervisors later made out to the Home Telephone Company and granted the franchise which they had been paid to withhold. IIUEF AXB HALSEY ACCXJSED Other Indictments Kept Secret. Heney After Big Bribegivers. SAN FRANCISCO. March 21. The long-looked-for indictments in the municipal grraft cases were returned toni&ht. Shortly before 6 o'clock the grand Jury, filed with Presiding Judge Coffey, of the Superior Court, 75 indictments,- charging bribery, which were found on evidence presented to the grand jury, after six months' prob ing into the 'municipal affairs of this city by Assistant District Attorney Francis J. Heney and Secret Service Agent William J. Burns, and which re veal an amazing story of .graft and corruption, that surpasses the boodle cases of St. Louis, ranks with the Min nesota expose, and is only eclipsed in the amount of money passed, but not In its ramifications and organization, by the famous Tweed ring of New York. Huff and Hal-soy the Chief. Of the indictments returned today 65 are against Abraham Ruef, for years the political bors of San Francisco, charging him with bribing the Board of Supervisors to giant franchises to the United Railroads, the Home Telephone Company, the San Francisco Gas & Electric Company and the so-called prizefighting "trust." Ten are against T. V. Hclscy, ex-general agent of the Pacific States Telephone & Telegraph Company, who Is charged with having bribed the Supervisors not-to giant a. franchise to the rival company. One indictment against Ruef and four more agalnct Halsey, which. It is understood, were also returned today, were not filed In open court. Several more indictments, the exact number and against what persons Mr. Heney and Mr. Burns refuse to divulge, until the accused parties have been ar retted, were returned bv the irrand Jury but not filed, Mr. Heney and Mr. Burns not even trusting the secret file. Cases Against Ruef. Of the 65 counts of bribery against Ruef, 17 are in connection with the granting of the overhead trolley fran chise to tho United' Railroads Immedi ately after the disaster of last April; 17 are based upon the money alleged to have been spent by the gas company to secure an S5-cent sas rate as against a 75-cent rate; 13 refer to. the passing of money by the Home Tele phone Company to obtain a franchise for a bid of $25,000. which, it has been declared, was worth at least 11,000,000; and 18 Indictments are based upon the alleged bribing of the Supervisors by Ruef to grant fight permits 'only to the so-called fight trust of this city,, which Is composed of Eddie Granoy, Morris Levy, James Coffroth and Willis Britf. Ruef Acted as Broker. The money in all these cases Is al leged to have been handled by Ruef, who according to Mr. Heney and Mr. Burns, was the agent and broker be tween the public service corporations and the Board of Supervisors and a sort of general distributing agent for all who desired privileges from the Supervisors. The Indictments against Hnlsey charge the agent of the Pacific States Telephone & Telegraph Company with bribing 14 members of the Board of Supervisors to refuse the rival com pany a franchise. Judge Coffey fixed the bail at $10,000 on each indictment, or a total of $650, 000 for Ruef and $100,000 for Halsey. The latter is a brother-in-law of the late John I. Sabin. ex-president of the Pacific States Telephone & Telegraph Company, later at the head of, the tele phone system in Chicago, and a brother-in-law of Louis Glass, president of the Philippine Telephone Company. Halsey has been for some time in Man ila, installing the system in the is lands. He has been under surveil lance for several days and extradition papers will be applied for as soon as he has been taken into custody. Orders have been cabled for his arrest. How Money Was Divided. In the overhead trolley deal, Ruef. according to Mr. Burns, was given $485,000 by the United Railroads, of which the political boss Is alleged to have divided $91,000. Of this amount $4000 Is said to have been given to each of 14 Supervisors, two received $10,000 each and one $15,000. In the restricting of boxing permits to the big four of the fight trust, the indict ments charge that $500 was given to each of IS Supervisors or a total of $9000. although a fund of $20,000 was said to have been collected for Ruef. In the alleged deal by which the Gas Company was given an 85-cent rate, $12,000, it is charged, was divided among 14 Supervisors in sums of $750 each, but the amount supposed to have been received by Gallagher is not known. Besides the $1)5.000 bid for its fran chise, Ruef is charged with having divided among 13 of the city fathers the sum of $62,000 received from the Home Telephone Company for the granting of a franchise to install their system in this city. In this connec tion It is noteworthy that 14 of the Supervisors are alleged to have also taken $5000 each from Halsey to pre vent the granting of the franchise to the Home Company and it is upon these counts that 14 indictments were returned against Halsey, only 10 of which were filed today. Mr. Heney stated that today's indict- tConcluded on Pace 3. CANADIAN PAG F G ENTERS PORTLAND Trains Will Come In on O.R.&N. Tracks; CONTRACTS ARE SIGNED HERE Freight Service From East via Spokane to Begin May 1. PASSENGER TRAINS LATER Will Give Tills City Shortest Route to St. Paul, Second Short Line to Chicago, and a Competitor for Hill and Harriman Systems. FOBTLAND'S N EW EAST. ROITTE TO Canadian Pacific Railway will run freight trains into Portland com mencing May 1. Passenger equipment will be put on within a short time thereafter. Contracts were signed yesterday with the O. R. & N. allowing the Canadian line the use of the Harri man tracks between Hpokane and Portland. This will give Portland the short est direct line to St. Paul of any city In the Pacific Northwest. The new road Into Portland will have equal mileage to Chicago with that of the Union Pacific. Through Pullman cars will. be ope rated to St. Paul and through freight carried to all Canadian points. St. Paul and the East and the Atlantic seaboard. Portland will gain largely by the entrance of the new line, adding a competing- route to both the Harri man and Hill systems. Canadian Pacific trains will be running into Portland May 1. Contracts were signed up here yester day by traffic officials of the Canadian road with R. B. Miller, general freight agent for the Oregon Railroad & Navi gation Company, allowing the use of tracks from Spokane to Portland. The Canadian Pacific now reaches Spokane by the Spokane International Railway from the C. P. R's. main line at the Canadian boundary. ' Freight service from Portland to all points in Canada, as well as to the At lantic seaboard, will be started May 1 by the new traffic arrangement. Passen ger trains will be put on at a later date. Through passenger service is promised from Portland to St. Paul. The use of the O. R, & N. tracks by Canadian Pacific equipment was arranged for recently at a conference between Vice-President G. M. Bosworth of the Canadian line and Traffic Director J. C. Stubbs of the Harriman system. This meeting was held in Chicago a short time ago. Contracts Signed in Portland. Formal contracts were signed yesterday in R. B. Miller's office by Mr. Miller and F. W. Peters, assistant freight traffic manager of the Canadian Pacific's West ern lines. B. W. Greer, general freight agent for the Canadian Pacific Railway, accompanied Mr. Peters to Portland and took part in formulating the contracts as signed. Both the Canadian officials left for home last night. Mr. Peters' headquarters are in Winnipeg and Mr. Greer's offices are in Vancouver. B. C. "Portland looks like excellent territory to us," said . Mr. Peters yesterday. "We look forward to getting a good share of the business here. Wre always get it where we go into new territory. While we will not handle local traffic between here and Spokane, we will take care of H6W MUCH HIGHER t!:ji. . .it-iinfflfr I :: if ' ' . t business from all points, along the O. R. & N. line to St. 'Paul and points east, to all Canadian territory and to the At lantic seaboard. ''As a tourist route this line will offer something far out of the ordinary and should be the means of bringing a large travel to Portland direct from St. Paul and points East. Through cars will be run between Portland and St. Paul by the new arrangement." What It Means to This City. The entrance of the Canadian Pacific to Portland means much for this city. The arrangement just made Is the next thing to building a new- railway Into Portland, for it opens up closer trade re lations with the entire Canadian country and offers another channel for business to St. Paul and the Atlantic Coast. The new road will bring much trans-Atlantic business this way as well. The Canadian Pacific has the record of having the largest mileage of any indi- Frank S. Dietrich, of Pocatello, Ap pointed United States Judge for Idaho. vidual railroad In the world. Its tracks cover about 12,000 miles. It Is the only American line reaching from the Atlantic to the Pacific. The Canadian Pacific's steamer lines touch at the biggest ports of the world, with new lines being con stantly added. This big transportation company carries passengers around the world without the tourist once leaving the ships or trains of the Canadian Pacific. Means Advertising for Oregon. Portland will benefit largely by being on the Canadian Pacific map. Oregon will be more widely advertised thrn ever be fore by tue line, which thas just gained entrance here. The latest move of the Canadian road shows the growing im portance of. Portland and Oregon "and promises the introduction of a health competition for business here which will result In much good. By the use of the O. R. & N. tracks to Spokane, the ' Canadian Pacific will have the shortest route of any railroad from Portland to St. Paul. It will tie the Union Pacific for the shortest line to Chicago. The actual mileage of the dif ferent roads is: To St. Paul, from Port land Northern Pacific, 2053: Great North ern.1911; Canadian Pacific, 1SS3:. Tb Chi cago Union Pacific 2290; Great Northern, 2318; Northern Pacific, 2460; Canadian Pa-cific-Soo lines, 2290. Why Northerly Route Is Shorter. This showing in milage is a surprise to almost anyone who has not calculated k, but the earth's curvature gives, the most northerly road the best of it just as the northerly ocean routes are shorter than those that strike directly across the bulging bosom of the sea. The new line will use the O. R. & N. warehouses for handling freight in and out of Portland. O. R- & N. locomotives will haul the Canadian trains as far ae Spokane, when the Spokane International Railway, built by D. C. Corbin six months ago. will take them to Tahk. the junction of the Canadian Pacific The Canadian Pacific is now building ten new passsen ger trains, which it is expected to use between Yahk and Portland during the coming year. The Canadian Pacific now enters Seattle through an arrangement with the Hill lines Identical with the agreement just concluded here, whereby Canadian Pa cific traffic is handled from Sumas. The (Concluded on .Page 10.) WILL STAGE-MANAGER HENEY MAT DODGE DEATH TO ENTER ASYL Thaw's Worst Terror May Be Realized. JEROME'S STARTLING MOVE Declares Prisoner Insane and Trial Is Stopped. LUNACY COMMISSION NEXT Effort to Introduce Hamilton's Evi dence Culminates in Dramatic Scene Both Sides to Produce Insanity Evidence Today. NEW YORK. March 20 The blow of which Harry" Kendall Thaw has-been In terror ever since the murder of Stanford Whits fell today. District Attorney Jer ome, did not make a formal application for the appointment of a commission In lunacy, but in an impassioned speech he appealed to the conscience of the court, declaring that bb Thaw sits daily in court he is incapable of advising his counsel and is believed -by every one who has watched and who. comes into contact with him to be Insane. -Mr. Jerome asserted that his own alien ists were convinced, when they had con sidered all the facts In connection with the case, that Thaw was of unsound mind. Mr. Jerome dramatically accused the counsel for the defense of concealing the testimony which, if presented to the court, would make the continuance of the trial a crime. So earnestly did Mr. Jer ome plead that Justice Fitzgerald ' dis missed the jury until Friday morning and adjourned court until 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon, when he will consider what evidence either side has to offer and de cide whether the trial shall go on or whether, a commission in lunacy shall be appointed to pass upon Thaw's present mental condition. Dramatic and Exciting The scenes attending the adjournment of court shortly after 1 o'clock were dra matic and exciting. Thaw's counsel seemed taken utterly by surprise., This was exjected to be the last day of the trial except for the summing up -before the jury. Soon after the three-cornered discussion among Justice Fitzgerald. Mr. Jerome and Mr. Delmas began. Thaw's five other attorneys gathered one by one around the Judge's desk and for a time seemed Intent upon 'denying what the court had termed the charges of unpro fessional conduct brought against them by the prosecuting officer. Thaw in L'tter Dejection. Thaw, .dejected, pale and dispirited, sat at his counsel table. He flushed crimson as one toy one his attorneys left him to rally to the support of Mr. Delmas. who, however, amid the proceedings, was su perseded by John B. Gleason. Thaw bit his nails, opened and closed his hands nervously, and Anally sank down In fils chair in an attitude of utter dejection. In an adjoining room, where they could hear the excited and uplifted voices of wrangling counsel, stood Mrs. Will lam Thaw, the mother, and Evelyn Nes bit Thaw, the wife, who had bared the secrets of her soul In tlie effort to save her husband from the electric chair and from the fate which he declares he fears more a madhouse. Hamilton Brings Climax. The climax of the nine-weeks' trial was precipitated by the action of the de fense In calling to the stand Dr. Allan McLane Hamilton, the alienist, who was first 'called into the case by Thaw's orig inal lawyers. Black, Olcott. Grubcr & Bonynge, cut who was dismissed, to- GET THE CURTAIN? gether with them, when he reported that Thaw was suffering from a form of paranoia which might never be cured. It wa3 the Intention of Mr. Delmas to interrogate Dr. Hamilton only with ref erence to four visits he made to Thaw In June and July. Mr. Jerome promptly objected, saying that. It Dr. Hamilton was to testify at all. he must tell every-. thing he knew in connection with the case, including the defendant's family history. The argument which ensued became so pertinent to the question of the present sanity or Insanity of the defendant that Justice Fitzgerald - directed the jury to retire from the room. Then the discus sion took on that broader range, which resulted in the court's determination, be fore proceeding further, to have pre sented to him the facts which the Dis trict Attorney asserted had been with held from the Jury by the defense, and which he had been unable to. give to the court in strictly legal form. Mr. Jerome then said: Jerome Threatens Opponents. It the rea.1 facts were known. 1 have no right to be here trying this man for his life. But the knowledge I have cannot be put in legal form before the jury. It Is mostly hearesay. But If 1 could get the facts be fore you they would shock .and -horrify the conscience of the court and instantly this case would be stopped. So deeply have 1 t-ecn Impressed with this that I have served notice on counsel of record that. If, when this trial Is concluded. I find that they were in possession of -facts which I believe to be In their possession. 1 shall call the attention of the appellate division of the Supreme Court to the matter. I feel very bitterly about this matter. There Is not a man who has watched this defendant sit ting here at thle table, that do,i not know that, as he sits there, he is Incapable of advising counsel. Thus, under the statutes. It becomes the duty of the court to stop the proceedings. Appeal to Judge's Conscience. Mr. Delmas sought to have Mr. Jerome place himself on record as formally ap plying for a lunacy commission, but the District Attorney would only repeat that he was calling the attention of the court to a matter which might appeal to his conscience. Mr. Jerome said that Drs. Bingaraan and Deemar, two of the Thaw family physicians, had told him facts concerning epilepsy on both" sides of the prisoner's family, but the defense had failed to bring out these matters in the testimony. He continued: I submitted to the alienists summoned by the state all the facts In my possession, and they one and all Informed me that the de fendant Is Buffering from a disease called paranoia, the chief characteristics of which are insane delusions that acting under these Insane delusions, he killed Stanford White, but that within the legal definition of in sanity he knew the nature and quality of his act and knew the act to be wrong. Offers "Real Evidence.'' Justice Fitzgerald wanted to know If the alienists had informed the District Attorney of their opinions before answer ing the long hypothetical question In court. Mr. Jerome admitted that they had. The evidence he submitted to them bad not been adduced in court, however. and be could not put It In the hypothet ical question. Mr. Jerome explained: Now that they have put Dr. Hamilton on the stand I have my first opportunity of laying before the court sworn testimony of a character which may demand the atten tlon of the court. For the first time we have the real evidence before us 'and I want It all to go In. Tour honor will eup port me In the claim that ever since this trial began I have struggled to have the doors opened wide, that all the facts might be brought out. But 1 have been met with objections and legal restrictions " every where. Mr. Delmas replied that it was strange, if the District Attorney had so long pos sessed the information he was stating to the court, that he had persisted so long In prosecuting to his death a man (Concluded on Page 10.) CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER The Weather. YBSTERDATS Maximum temperature, 53 degrees; minimum. 3ft. TOLAYS Rain; southerly winds. Foreign. British woman suffragists again attack House of Commons. Page 2. Rebellion of peasants spreads throughout jHoumama. Page .1 National. Dietrich appointed Federal Judge for Idaho. Page 3. . , Census Bureau estimates population of Pa cific Coast cities. Page 1. Prospects of land law reform by next Con gress. Page 8. ttomestie. Hakin on historic churches. Page I. Thaw case taken from Jury and court calls for evidence on 'Insanity. Page 1. Ptiter and Tarpley tell how they got fraud ulent land patents In Hermann case. Page 2. Rockefeller favors Federal control of rail- roads. Page 8. Pacific Coast Indictments by wholesale against Ruef, Halsey and others; revelations only just begun. Page 1. Floods do Immense damage in Stockton and other cities. Page 4. Pacific University loses suit to recover property on which liquor was sold. Page 5- Seattle Chamber of Commerce passes reso lutions opposing propdsed treaty with Japan. Page (1. Butte printers will probably capitulate to publishers. Page 5. Commercial and Marine. Oregon hop production greater than esti mated. Page 15. Wall street operators show lack of confi dence. Page 15. Chicago wheat market declines at close. Page 15. Derelict, bark Me la nope is sold to James Griffiths & 'Co., of Seattle. Page 7. Portland and Vicinity. Contracts signed for Canadian Pacific trains .to enter Portland cyer tracks of O. R. ft N. Page 1. Insanity as a defense in murder cases dis cussed by IVr. Williamson before Ctty and County Medical Society. Page 6. Loggers association votes to keep camps closed until March 31; lumber, mill strik ers losing ground. Page 14. Pomona Grange demands appointment of high-salaried, practical man as head of Oregon 'Agricultural College. Pae 7. Mayor I-Jine vetoes Mount Hood Railroad franchlee. Page 10. Many divorces granted by Multnomah Coun ty courts InvaMd. Page 6. Council decides to allow free water charter .amendment to go before voters. Page 6. Labor party leaders will probe records of all candidates. Page 10. . WHERE PILGRIMS FOUGHT INDIANS Churches Which Were Used as Forts. MUSKETS STACKED IN AISLES Colonial Cemetery Robbed by Encroaching Sea. OLD MARYLAND CHURCHES Built of Brick Brought Prom Eng land With Hoots Given by Queen. Anne Little Church Where Actors Are Married. WASHINGTON. March 15. I Special Correspondence.) The old churches of New England are rich In stories that show the brave spirit of colonial days. The earliest edifices combined military features with the ecclesiastical and, while the parson preached with his own musket leaning against the pulpit, senti nels stood at the door ready to give warn ing of Indians. The blunderbusses of the men-worshipers stood stacked in the center of the aisle, and the reserve supply of powder for the colony was stored, in the loft overhead. Thle place was se lected as the magazine because there were no fires in the early churches, it being taken as a sign of spiritual weak ening if one should grow cold while at devotions. Sometimes these chureheg be came real fortresses and it was no un usual thing to see wolves heads nailed to the walls by successful trophy-hunters. The law in New England required that all houses be built within a certain distance of the church, an arrangement that guar anteed mutual protection and brought all members of the town in reach of the drum-beats that summoned the men to church or to war. Where Miles Ktandlsh Prayed. The Church, of the Pilgrimage at Ply mouth. Massachusetts, stands today on the Rite of the one where Miles Standish worshipped so long ago and up whose aisle he strode in his mud-stained . clothing only to see the lovely Priscllla made the wife of John Alden. In the old church Roger Williams preached before he was sent away to a life of exile among the Indians, and from the same old church William Bradford went out with an ex ploring party one day to be caught in glorlously In an Indian deer-trap. The old cemetery, where the dead were buried and where wheat was sown so that the Indians might not see how many of the congregation had died, has Teen robbed by the sea In its encroachments on the land. The site and name of this historic church date ack to 1640. Refuge of the Regicides. Centre Church at New Haven, Connec ticut, was built by the Episcopalians in 1640, when bullets were used as legiti mate currency and when ' drum-beats called tlie hours for matins and evensong. A new house was built in 1670, and here for awhile preached William. Hooke. a man of stern religious convictions, who left the colony to become chaplain to Cromwell when the Commonwealth sup planted the court of Charles in England. Hooke was the first man to suggest tho ' founding of Tale College, giving iiis -home-lot for the perpetual maintenance of a teaching officer or schoc'-maater. It has been used ever since as the home or the rectors or presidents of Tale. , This church was the one which had greatest sympathy for Cromwell, and! here were supported and protected Whal ley and Goffe, two of the regicides re sponsible for the death of Charles I. '. One James Davids also came to dwell in the town and attend the church, a peace able, likable fellow about whom there waa always an air of mystery. This was explained when he died.' for he was none other than John Oixwell,. the third regi cide. When the present edifice was erect ed in 1814, it was necessary to extend it over the graveyard, and there are now 139 graves in the crypt, among them be ing that of Benedict Arnold's first wife. The communion service still in use was given by Queen Anne. Where Washington Wor&hipped. When Philadelphia was the capital ot the United States the churches there had many conspicuous figures in their con gregations. Washington and Adams went to worship in Christ Church, and for many years Benjamin Franklin had a pew there. Part of the church dates back to 1727, and part of the communion service now in use was, given by good Queen Anne, the almoner to America where communion services were con cerned. The oldest church in the Quaker- City is the Church of the Gloria Del, generally known as Old Swedes Church, the present edifice having been dedicated -In 1700. St. Peter's, completed in 1761, keeps guard over the dust of Commodore Decatur in Its churchyard, and at St. Paul's, 'a church almost as old, Kdwin Forrest Is burled. Early Maryland Churches. St. Paul's, in Kent County, Maryland, has the same walls that were erected In 1713, though the church dates back to 1693, and the communion service is the same that was given by Colonel Thomas Smythe In 1699. At St. Luke's, Wye, an east-shpre church, the records show th Interest taken by .members of the King's Concluded on Page 8-)