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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1908)
BEND IMPERIAL AT Admiral Sperry Refuses Send Marines to Parade Without Guns. to PROGRAMME NEARLY UPSET Awkward Point Overcome Without Friction, but Uncle Sam's Fight ing Forces Will Carry Xo Powder in Guns. SYDNEY, N. S. Aug. 20. There arose today a circumstance In connec tlon with the narade of American blue 1rkt and marines in Sydney tomor rna vhlrh t one time DTOmlsed tO make it impossible for the carrying out of the programme as originally planned, but the matter has been ad Justed and the men will march in ac cordance with expectations. TmnriMi a ff-ni n 1 1 rn fnrhld the land' Ins; of armed men in Australia. This fact was communlcatea 10 wanur. cn.v -hn in renlv - informed th government that he would not allow hi. mAn tn rini-rioinatA In the Drocession and reviews unless they came ashore armed. This was followed oy a con Admiral SDerrv and the commonwealth government, after which it was announced that the gov ernment had granted permission for the American sailors inu murines land armed, but without ammunition This provision was accepted by thi imricnn rnmmander and the pro- gramme will therefore be carried out unaltered.' Messengers of Friendship. Rear-Admlral Sperry has sent thi following message in reply to the com munlcatlon from Alfred Deakin, thi Prime Minister of Australia, welcoming the American fleet to Australian waters: The America Navy i fortunate In betas the means of bringing Americans and Aus tralians In closer touch, and the officers and men of thia fleet are appreciative of the honor of being messengers of friendship and good-will. Tomorrow is set aside for the public reception ana puduc iau'6- " l ... rnrd i n 1 1 1 v and Whole hearted welcome which fills the people of this city nas louna opiiunuimj i v -presslon in several ways. Numberless harbor craft have circled ail aay ions around the white battleships anchored in K Kb.. mnA h firPB Arid headlands were crowded until late this afternoon by thousands of interested spectator. Exchange Official Otlls. This afternoon the Admiral of the fleet and the captains came ashore and called officially upon Lord Northcote, r.Av.tiiA,.p.iiral i.i Australia, and Sir Harry Rawson, Governer of New South Wales. The American officers were saiuted upon landing. Later the Gov ernor paid his official call ana was in turn saluted by the American fleet. This morning Lord Northcote gave a dinner In behalf of the American officers. There were present 6 Americans, in cluding the Admirals and the Captains, as well as Sir Harry Rawson, the British Admiral, ministers of state and of the . commonwealth, and numeroua other of- . V.lw null livers i inBii Admiral Sperry. commander of the American fleet, was interviewea on the arrival of the vessels of his command. He said: "ThA wlrnm e-rtended the Amerl can fleet has been very hearty and Impressive. The hillsides and the .iifr fmm Pntflnv Riir ii n were cover ed with people as close as they could stand. The welcome accoraea us i lmnat hevnnd hellef. and it seeirs evi iint that iirh a demonstration of kindly feeling must have more back of H than mere curiosity ana excitement. Jt is very pleasing to me to think that this indicates a real and heartfelt sympathy between the two Lngllsn- r..aif natinn who are united not only by the ties of blood, but by great commercial interests in tne racinc ana inewhere. Please extend my thanks to the people and the authorities for this welcome." The Governor of "Western Australia. Ad mlrot Ctfiwrf htta Ytndd An I H vl T A tion to the American Admirals to stay at the Government house at Perth on their way to the gold fields In the north. TREPARE TO RECEIVE FLEET Chinese Commissioners at Amoy Provide Suitable Site. AMOY, Aug. 2D. The Chinese commis sioners having the natter in charge have selected the parade ground one mile out side this city as the best place for the entertainment of the cfflcers and men of the American battleship fleet when the vesrels reach here the latter part of October. Large buildings are being put up to be used in entertaining the visitors. A boat race has been added to the pro gramme of sport a Fleet's Advance Guard. COLOMBO. Aug. 20. The battleships Alabama and Maine, which have been de tached from the Atlantic battleship fleet snd are preceding the fleet by about a month on the trip around the world, left here today for Aden, where they are due August 27. To Receive Pacific Fleet. HONOLULU. Aug. 20. Governor Frear today appointed .a committee to have charge of the arrangements for the reception and entertainment of the offi cers and men of the Pacific fleet when they arrive here. REIGN OF BLOOD AT END (Continued From First Page.) this afternoon, after which it was offi cially given out that in order to avoid the danger of a collapse of the annex ation movement, tne government had Secided in a spirit of conciliation to accept the action of the chamber with regard to Congo finances. The members of th ministry will, therefore, retain their portfolios. The situation regarding the annexa tion of the Congo Independent State was thrown Into great confusion last (rear by the action of King Leopold In withdrawing the control of the trown domain, the richest part of the Congo, from the regular Congo ad ministration in order to prevent the saxsage of the domain to Belgium Ihould annexation be consummated. Forced King to Act. This action was bitterly resented by 3ie friends of annexation In Parlia ment as a usurpation of Belgium's pUosja hjerliua and. tne opposition I SYDNEY became so great that In February of this year King Leopold changed his attitude on this matter and agreed to abandon the crown domain and the crown foundation to Belgium, stipulat ing that Belgium should not only as sume all the Congo obligations, amounting to $21,000,000, but under take also to continue the King's usufruct in the Congo's revenues dur ing his lifetime. Belgium was required specifically to respect the concessions granted to two American companies In 1906, In which Thomas F. Ryan is interested. The stipulations vere embodied In the final draft of the treaty. Under the terms of the treaty the Congo's .revenues are charged with the following annual allowances: Twenty-four thousand dollars to Prince Al v.A. nf thA fount of Flanders. v. . . r trin. TnnnM 11 K ftfti) to Princess Clementine, the King's third daughter, and, as an especial token of gratitude to me iiing, tne sum tiA nnr. aaa In 13 annual fnjttallmen for his use In maintaining hospitals and schools and forwarding scientific work In Arrica. r unnermore oeigi .T,.ar,H thai ntn nf X4 0.1(11)00 w-jrk for which contracts have already been maae. King Retains Interests. In addition King Leopold retains In fee simple 40.000 hectares of land" at Mayumbe for coffee and cocoa grow lng experiments, and during his life time he Is to enjoy his interests in the Congo concessionary companies and the property in Belgium and France which he purchased out of the funds of the Congo foundation. Upon the death of the King all this property will revert to Belgium. TEST WRIGHT AEROPLANE OHIO INTEXTOR'5 MACHINE IS BROUGHT TO FORT 1IYER. Preliminary Flights Under Auspices of Army Board to Be Made Next "Week. "WASHINGTON. Aug. 20. Orville O. Wright, of Dayton. O.. the aeroplanlst. is expected at Fort Myer tomorrow. The Wright brothers' aeroplane Is now at tne post across the Potomac. It will Be as sembled at the balloon-house as soon as Mr. Wright arrives. Two mechanics from the Wright brothers' shop are now at Fort Mver. The preliminary flights of the Wright aeroplane are not expected to begin until next week. In the meantime the officers of the Signal Corps will continue prac tice flights with the motor balloon. Two military spherical balloons, one captive and one free, built for the Army by Cap tain Baldwin, were Inspected at Fort Myer today and found to meet all specifications. Airships Crnlse Together. BERLIN, Aug. 20. The Dross and the Parseval steerable balloons cruised to gether for two hours today, over Ber lin. They performed various evolu tlons with great success, and were close together for the entire flight. They sailed the length of Unter Den Linden, only a short distance above the housetops, and were cheered by the crowds in the streets. The Duke of Sachsen-Altenburg was again at the helm' of the Parseval. Both balloons will make dally ascensions for the pur pose of training new men In their management. ABANDON BIG RACE TRACK Brighton Beach Course Sold for Building Lots. NEW YORK. Aug. 20. The Brighton Beach Racing Association plant has been sold to a land development company, and within a week laborers will be at work cutting the famous race course' Into streets and building lots. Among the large and. small business men to whom the annual revenues de rived from the free spending crowds that frequented the course were an important factor in the success of their enterprises there is much gloom. The staggering blow which racing received by the pas sage of the anti-gambling bills was a hard one for the local hotelkeepers and merchants, but they were all hopeful of the ultimate return of the old brisk days and a revival of racing interest at Brighton. With the abandonment of the course tfVid its transformation into a home center, all hope of racing ever again getting a foothold near the sea has vanished. HORSES GO TO SOUTH AMERICA Keene Admits Death of Racing in New York. NEW YORK. Aug., 20. Eighty-eight thoroughbread horses, valued at J500 000, (he property of J. B. Haggln and James R. Keene, were shipped irom here today for Buenos Ayres. A track on the deck will be used In calm weath er for exercising the animals. The shipment is believed to he due to the decline In the horse . racing which followed the enactment of the anti-betting laws in this state. MUTE PLEA FOR BIRDS Society Woman Would Mend Dislo cated Millinery Morals. ' N F.W YORK. Aug. 30. Mrs. Frank K. Sturgis, known in society here and in Lenox, intends the gift of a collection of rare and beautiful birds of paradise, which she has just presented to the American Museum of Natural History, as a first aid for - dislocated millinery morals. She is a member of the mu seum and also a leading spirit in the Au dubon Society, which is pledged to pre vent the slaughter of birds for the pur pose of hat adornment. Several of the rarer birds cost J100 each unmounted. and there' is not one of the 70 specimens which is not of high intrinsic worth as well as of scientific value. These birds are found only in New Guinea and a few Islands off its coast. and despite their limited number they re hunted remorselessly by "plumers employed by the wholesale milliners. The plumage of the male bird attains its dazzling beauty in the mating season, and the killing therefore is causing the species to disappear. England has re cently passed a law which goes into effect June 1, 1909, forbidding the fur ther importation of the plumage of such birds into the United Kingdom. Of the 85 varieties of birds of paradise. SO are represented in the 70 specimens. The 25 other species are only slightly varying forms. The collection Is better than any other In the United States and is surpassed only by collections In Lon don and Dresden. The assemblage was rathered after two years' research by Frank M. Chapman, of the museum staff, who is a noted ornithologist and has achieved remarkable results In the mounting of birds. Toronto Has $140,000 Fire. TORONTO. Ont.. Aur. 20. Fire today partially destroyed the warehouse and store of Rice, Lewis A. Son, hardware. hoSBL tL10tXXL ' - I MURDER RUMOR N FLAMES CITI Springfield Aroused by Acci dental Shooting of Grand Jury Witness. TROOPS READY TO LEAVE Seventh Regiment Remains to Assist Police Forces ' in Maintaining Order Negro Refugees Are Headed for Missouri. SPRINGFIELD, 111., Aug. 20. Spring field was inflamed tonight by a report that Rolla Keyes, a 17-year-old boy, who testified before the special grand jury, when that body indicted George Richard son for an alleged attack upon Mrs. Ma bel Hallam, had been' shot by friends of the accused negro. Before the rumor had time to spread far, however, it was learned that the shooting was accidental, the wound having been inflicted by a bul let from a revolver belonging to a com panion of Keyes. The boy is so seriously injured that he may not recover. Because of the excitement caused by the first reports of the accident, extra precau tions were taken by Colonels Moriarity end Foreman, in command of the two military sections of the city, to prevent the gathering of crowds. Fears Felt in "Black Belt." The members of the patrols were also instructed to spread the true version of the accident and to arrest any person discovered! counseling violence to negroes. The occurrence caused fresh fears In the "Black Belt," despite the attempts of the officials to quiet the town. The arsenal was crowded with refugees n.ain anA thMA waa flljm tL 1 number of negroes who slept under the protec tion ot a guard irom tne dovciihi 6' ment at Camp Lincoln. Troops Leave City Today. Final relinquishment of the military control of this city will take place tomor row as the result of a conference be tween Governor Deneen and General Young today. The First Regiment will be sent to Chicago and the remaining regiment, the Seventh Infantry, will be held here in reserve in case the Sheriff's force and police are unable to preserve the peace whicn. the troopa have estab lished. The local authorities began today the task of overcoming the handicap on their efforts to fix responsibility for the recent riots. Imposed by the failure of the cor oner's inquest to hold any one responsible for the death of Scott Burton, the negro lynched In the "Black Belt" last Friday night. The open verdict of the coroner's jury was a blow to the hopes of the state's at torney and other officials who saw the confirmation of the suspicion that wit nesses to the rioting would fail to recog nize leaders of the mob when called upon to testify in public proceedings. Apathy in Grand Jury. Only one witness appeared on the stand. That witness displayed an unusually poor memory when confronted with incisive questions. The grand jury went ahead with Its in vestigation today, but there was consider ably less enthusiasm regarding its work than was displayed two days ago. Some firing was heard today in tne outlying sections of the city, but nervous militiamen were responsible for it. There were probably half a dozen calls for troops at the various headquarters, but In none of the cases was their presence necessary. Work waa resumed at the Tuxhorn Mine, which had been shut down because of the refusal of the whites and negroes to work together. The orders of the of ficials of the miners' union were respon sible for this and other mines affected by similar conditions are expected to resume tomorrow. Refugees continue to leave town. Neigh boring villages and hamlets, however, are In many Instances refusing the negroes a haven, and most of the colored people who departed today were bound for com munities at a distance from this city. Many of the negroes selected Missouri as their destination, but most of the emi grants started for Chicago, Peoria and other Illinois cities. Drives Negro to Suicide. ESKRIDGE. Kan., Aug. 20. Griev ing and worrying over the result of the Springfield riots caused Plato Brake bill, a respectable negro resident of this place, to commit suicide last even ing at Alma, by swallowing carbolic acid. He had discussed the matter fre quently of late and a search of his pockets after death showed a number of the riot clippings. He leaves a family here. BOWS TO WILL -OF PARTY Governor Johnson Will Accept Nom ination for Third Term. ST." PAUL, Aug. 20. Shortly before noon today Governor Johnson called the newspaper men together and announced he would accept the nomination for gov ernor tendered to him by the state con vention yesterday. He said: After due consideration of the mat ter, and before I have been formally noti fied. I will tell you that I have made up my mind to lay aside all personal con siderations and listen "to the call of the party. I will accept the nomination when it is formally tendered to me. 'I desire to state also and to make It emphatic, that if the committee (had called on me before the nominating speech had been made, J would have positively declined to be a candidate." HIGH PRAISE FOR COAST Chicago Man's Eyes Opened by Trip to Northwest. CHICAGO, Aug. 20. The magnitude of natural wealth and prospective prosper ity of the Pacific Northwest are far be yond the present conception of the aver age Chicagoan, in the opinion ot Harry A. Wheeler, chairman of the ways and means committee of the Chicago Associ ation of Commerce. Mr. Wheeler recently made a tour of the Pacific Northwest in the interest of trade extension and today reported his observations. LITTLE GIRLS KIDNAPED Daughters of Wealthy Kenosha Man Man Held for Ransom? KENOSHA. Wis., Aug. 20. Detectives Jpdftl a WiSfi Jo (Clear the m;tery surrounding the disappearance of Ger trude and Dorothy uean. oausiueis Jacob Behn. one of the wealthiest resi dents of Southern Wisconsin. The girls. 11 and 12 years of age respectively, have not been seen since their parents left them swinging in a hammock on the lawn at home Monday night. It is thought they were kidnaped and are held for ransom. Another tangle Is the receipt by Mrs. Behn, stepmother of the missing maids, of a note several weeks ago, warning her that a plot was on foot to steal the girls. Members of the household say that Monday night a closed carriage was driven up to the Behn gate. It is de clared that a voice was heard sharply commanding the girls to enter and that they obeyed. The horses then were whip ped up and the victims rapidly carried Affer an unsuccessful search by rela tives and local authorities. Mr. Behn came to Kenosha last evening and en gaged detectives to work upon the case. Several years ago the girls' mother died. Twelve months ago their father married Mrs. Anne Schenkenberg, of Milwaukee. The stepmother appears to have been well liked by the children and not a word of dissatisfaction at their home life has ever been uttered by them in public. CONTRADICTORY STATEMENTS FROM ATTORNEYS. Wife Denies Improper Conduct With Annis, but Captain's Lawyer De clares Her Story Ridiculous. NEW YORK, Aug. 20. Interest in the case of the Hains brothers, now awaiting indictment and trial in the Queens County Jail for the murder of William E. Annis on the float of the Bayside, L. I.. Yacht Club last Satur day, centers today in various contra dictory statements issued by the law yers for Captain Peter C. Hains and his brother, Thornton J. Hains, and by those having charge or the interests of Mrs. Hains, the captain's wife. Frank G. Wild, Mrs. Hains' attor ney, insisted that, signed . confessions to the contrary notwithstanding, Mrs. Hains had never been guilty of im proper conduct with Annis. Mr. Wild denied a published story that Mrs. Hains was trying to effect a reconciliation with her husband and would testify in his behalf at the trial. Weldon C. Percy, the first lawyer called in to defend Captain Hains and his brother, refused to comment on the vari ous statements. In respect to the much exploited incident of ihe automobile ride in which Captain Hains took Annis after his return from the Philippines, Mr. Percy threw a new light. "The Captain," said he. "returned with the conviction that all the gossip con necting Annis and his wife was absolutely without foundation. He studied up on a way to silence the detractors of the woman he loved and decided that the best way would be to openly Invite Annis to dinner at the fort. He did this, trust ing the word of his wife. That night Annis came to the tort with his wife and after dinner the four went out together on an automobile ride. Subsequent, to that the Captain discovered the truth. The talk of Mrs. Hains not having been, in full possession of her faculties a.t the time she signed the confession is ridicu lous. Fully 12 hours elapsed between her oral and written confessions." CHILDREN BURN TO DEATH (Continued From First Page.) stove, must have started It. Little Alma Schultz, who escaped -uninjured, ran swiftly to the home of neighbors, half a mile away, and gave the alarm. , Aid reached the place too late, how ever, for when neighbors arrived the house was in ashes and the charred remains of the six children were found. The six corpses will be taken to Spokane for burial. The six bodies have been placed in three caskets. Gladys and Arthur Schultz were placed in one casket, Lu cille, Mlra and Celia Fix were placed in another and the remains of Esther were placed in a separate casket. It is generally believed that Rosa Schultz, the heroine, will die as a result of her injuries. When she discovered the fire and rushed outside she had presence of mind enough to saturate her clothing with water before she went back to save the others. However, she did not extin guish the fire in her hair, and the in juries resulting from this will likely cause her death. Great Missionary Meeting. NEW' YORK, Aug. 20. A foreign mis sionary conference composed of mission aries and missionary workers from all parts of the world will be held in Edin burgh, Scotland, in June, 1910. The forth coming conference, which will be the largest of its kind, has received the in dorsement of President Roosevelt, W. H. Taft and James Bryce, British Ambassa dor to the United States. s Martin " Miller. Assessor-elect of Yamhill County, wife and son. are in the city, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jenning. of 621 East Hoyt street. Biggest, Busiest and Best on the Coast and the Northwest The House of Highest Quality IF YOU WANT TO KNOW WHAT SMARTLY DRESSED MEN WILL WEAR: THIS ADVANCE STYLES COLLEGE CLOTHES on display a complete line of COLLEGE STYLE CLOTHES for young men very different from those heretofore shown. Take advantage of early choosing. On exhibition SECOND FLOOR take elevator Price $15 to $35 EES TRDUBLEIN CABINET Premier Asquith Hurries Home From Scotland. SIR EDWARD GREY ANGRY Raids Into Sphere of Foreign Office by Winston Churchill and David , Lloyd George Arouse Minister to Wrath. LONDON. Aug. 30. The return today of Prime. Minister Asquith from a holiday In Scotland and his lengthy conference with Sir Edward Grey, Secretary of Foreign Affairs, are being connected in some quar ters with developments arising out of the recent meeting of King Edward and Em peror William and Emperor Francis Jo seph. ' So far as known, however, nothing oc curred at these royal conferences that is likely to have such immediate political consequences as to have necessitated this urgency meeting of British ministers. It Is much more probable that Mr. Asquith waa obliged to interrupt his holiday for the purpose of pacifying Sir Edward, who, it is known, keenly resents the raids of Winston Churchill, President of the Board of Trade, and David Lloyd George, Chan cellor of the Exchequer, into the sphere of the Foreign Office. Churchill's recent speech upon Anglo German relations and Lloyd George's In terviews on the continent, which seem to have been accepted there as indicating that he has some proposals to make to Germany regarding the naval programme of the two countries. Intensely angers the Foreign Secretary, and there is reason to believe that it was his representations to Mr. Asquith on this subject which are said to have amounted practically to an ultimatum that broaght the Premier to London. The relations of Sir Edward Grey and Came to a quick ending last Saturday evening, but just as advertised and because all the pianos one hundred .were sold. This six-dollars-a-month sale is liable to close soon, and for that verysame reason, so now we ask all who contemplate taking advan tage of our special easy, terms to do so this week and avoid disappointment. . COME DOWN THIS FORENOON, if possible; today by all means. Your savings run from $125 to $200, according to the piano selected. This actual real cash is worth coming to save, even if you live a couple of hundred miles out of the city. REMEMBER THE TERMS $6 CASH AND $6 A MONTH Take any of these until all are sold. $185 for Best $325 Pianos. Pay $138 for Best $265 Pianos. $243 for Best $400 Pianos. $144 for Finest $275 Pianos. $294 for Our Best $500 Pianos. And a store full of other equally as good Pianos at smallest known terms and prices SEASON, ASK BEN SELLING N Mr. Haldane, the Secretary of War, with some of the more socialistic members of the Cabinet, have been strained for some time. The Foreign Secretary is firmly opposed to the social reform programme at the expense of the Army and Navy which some of his colleagues are inces santly advocating. The incursion of these latter into the sphere of general affairs, which Sir Edward regards as unjustifi able Interference in matters belonging exclusively to the Foreign Office, has brought the friction to a climax, and it Is anticipated that his protest will result in a hint being given to those ministers to confine themselves more closely to their own departments. NO FAITH IN POLICEMEN Sew York Man Escapes Jury Duty on Novel Plea. - NEW YORK, Aug. 20. James Hamilton, an .insurance man, was dismissed from further Jury service by Judge Malone in General Sessions "without the thanks of the court," because he puts no faith in the word of a policeman. Mr. Hamilton had declared in the Jury room recently that he would never convict anyone on the word of a policeman and largely on that account the, Jury had failed to agree in the case of a man who has been up for trial before every Judge In general sessions. Assistant District Attorney McGulre had heard of this. When Mr. Hamilton was called yesterday In a case of robbery where a policeman was an important wit ness, he asked him if he would accept the man's evidence as he would the evidence of a civilian. "I don't want to serve, and don't think I ought to." said Mr. Hamilton. "I have a very strong prejudice against the po lice." "If you have this strong prejudice against any clas of persons," said the Judge, "you are not fit to serve. Tou are discharged from further service, and without the thanks of the court." Dog Bites Little Girl. SEASIDE. Or.. Aug. 20. While the little daughter of W. E. Prudhomme was playing with her pet dog. another dog came up and the two animals be gan to fight. The child thrust herself between them and was severely bitten on the arm by the strange dog. The wound was immediately dressed by Dr. W. E. Lewis and so far is healing nicely. OUE LAST SALE -DOLLAR-A-WEEK- EILERS PIANO HOUSE 353 WASHINGTON STREET m.p Leading MJj Clothier FEDERAL JUDGES BLINDED I HADLEY OF MISSOURI RAPS OIL DECISION. Tells National Association of Attor-neys-Oeneral Corporations Get Too Many Favors. DENVER, Aug.20. "The Judge who cannot see the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey In the Standard Oil Com pany of Indiana, and who cannot see through both of these legal fictions to the real owners and the real offenders. John D. -Rockefeller, H. H. Rogers, John D. Archbold and others, is either blinded by prejudice or by an unfortunate dispo sition to obscure the merits of a contro versy by strained and irrelevant techni calities," declared Attorney-General Her bert S. Hadley, of Missouri, today in his address before the second annual conven tion of the National Association of Attorneys-General, of which he is president. The statement was made in the course of a review of the reversal by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals of the $29, 000.000 fine which was assessed against the Standard Oil Company of In diana by Judge Landis, of the United States District Court. "To assert that men may. by the or ganization of a puppet corporation, escape the proper measure of punishment for their wrongdoing." said President Had ley. "Is to give to the legal fiction of the corporation greater rights, privileges and Immunities than those which belong to natural persons. "This case should serve as an im pressive argument as to the necessity of the National and State Govern ments enacting a law to the effect that no Judgment in a criminal or civil case should be reversed unless the court can affirmatively say upon the entire record, that the Judgment will be for the wrong party,- and that but for the error complained of, a differ ent Judgment would have been ren dered. . . r "The results secured, or rather, the lack of results secured," President Hadley "further said, "furnish an added demonstration of the ineffectiveness of the present methods of litigation for the suppression or punishment of trusts and monopolies.