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About Beaver State herald. (Gresham and Montavilla, Multnomah Co., Or.) 190?-1914 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 25, 1910)
3 » TRUST GRIPS ALASKA Commute on Territories Allenes Cúmplete Control. BUYING UP UBAI. AND RAILROADS J. P. Morgan and Guggenheim Inter ests Heve Plan Ip Practically Own Alaska's Industries 9 4 Washington, Feb. 19. Senator Bev eridge, of Indiana, got hla committee on territories Into action today and within a short time had established the fact that the Alaskan syndicate owned by J. I*. Morgan A Co. and the Guggen heim brothers had n steel grip on the natural resources of that territory. The fast of significance brought out is that the Morgan Guggenheim syndi cate has an option on the celebrated Cunningham coal claims through which came the quarrel that resulted in Gifford I’inchot being dismissed as United States forester and brought on the so called Ballinger Pmchot inves tigation now under way. These claims, according to the testi mony brought uut by the Indiana sen ator are now held in escrow awaiting th" decision of ths government aa to whether they are valid. If they are eventually approved, the Murgan-Gug genheim syndicate will come Into pos session of them. The Alaskan syndi cate ie the general name for the vari ous companies operating in Alaska, all Iwlng owned by the Morgan-Guggen heim crowd. It was shown that ths syndicate was formed in 1906 by the purchase of 46 l»r cent of the stock of th" Northwest ern Commercial company, which owned the Northwestern bteamship company and the Northwestern Fishes- les company. The latter company packs 300,000 cases of salmon annual ly, as commtrod with a pack of 2,000,- 000 cases by other Interests. Last year the Alaska Steamalp company was formed by reorganizing the com panies In which the syndicate had iiought large internets and it now operatr-a 12 «learners, or rathsr 11, aa reports today indicate that one haa been losL A long list of ateamahip companies in which the Alaska syndi cate haa no interest was given in sup port of Its claim that it was not a mon opoly. The railroad owned by the syn dicate ia no ar 102 miles long, and is to be extended to 199 miles. Both Messrs. Stee'e and Birch in sisted that there was no truth In the re ports that ths syndicate had, or was seeking, a monopoly of railroads, steamship lines,fisheries, cop|x r mines or coal lands in Alaska. They denied with great emphasis that they were trying to "gobble up" Alaska. ROOSEVELT HUNT OVER. Party Leaves for Khartoum In Perfect Health. All Are Gondokoro. Soudan. Feb. 19. With th" departure of the Roosevelt party clown the Nile, the great hunt of Bwana l'timbo through the I wilds of East Africa closed today, The sti>ry of the "portly master,” replete with stirring mcid< nt and full of admiring praise for his prowess as a mighty hunter, will now take its place in the lore of the native who worships ahim as h king from a foreign land. It is probable that there will be sev eral little side tripe for hunting on the way to Khartoum, but these will be of little com|>arative importance and it is not expected that any big game will t>e found. The members of the party, all of whom are well and apparently have thrived upon the outdoor life of the jungle, consider that the big hunt is over. WOHNT NTOHM OF WINTER À DOUBTFUL REBUKE. Rocky Mountain Billiard Spreads Over East and West Th« 1.1111« Quaker"«« V«ll««tlr C»- kralSeS Iler Kioto«« Xrllhbor. Chicago, Feb. IH. The blizzard that gripped th« Rocky mountains and Mis souri valley region« yesterday swept eastward belay and tonight the Ohio valley and western Alleghenies are struggling with on« of Ilia heaviest snow« of the winter. Extreme cold prevailed in the West ern states today, the thermometer at the summit of the Rockies going as low aa till b<-low zero. It was 17 be low at I'ueblo. Tuin|>eraturi a in th« middle Missouri valley moderated during the day, but with nightfall lb" thermometer again began to full and zero weather 1s prmliet«! by tomorrow morning. A sever« blizzard is raging over lake Erie and Ohio ia burled under heavy snow. I'aaaenger truuk lines east of Chicago on« to four hours late. Th« temperature at Bl. Louie to- night is 4 below zero, and ten.pera- lures as low aa H I m low ar« reported in Miseouri aiel Southern Illinois. Cincinnati tonight lies under a blanket of snow which ia the heaviest fall recorded there In 26 years. Th" snow has been falling steadily for 24 hours and at 10 o'clock tonight has reached a dept of 20 inches. Communication with th« Kentucky aide of the Ohio ri »er practically sev ered for several hours thia morning. All trains ar« from one ,to four hours late. Reports from towns throughout Southern and Western Ohio say 24 in ches of snow ie general. A gal« ranging in velocity from 40 to 60 miles an hour and bearing with It a heavy enow, haa demoralized tra’fic in Northern Ohio. I’aseenger trains on the New York Central and I'ennslvania lines are run ning 2 to 4 hours late. Practically no freight trains are moving. In th« 36 hours ending at 8 o’clock 14.9 inches of snow fell nt Columbus, Ohio. This ia the deepest enow on record there. At 6:30 o'clock this morning the thermometer registered 17 degrees be low zero at Pueblo, Colo., the coldest of the winter, and «he coldest weather on record in Pueblo ao late In the win ter. Suffering of cattle on the range is reported. JAPAN TAKES EXCEPTIONS Leading Newspaper Says Japanese Should Be Naturalized. Tok io, Feb. 18. "Wo are tired of the anti Japaneaiam of Ain«rican pol iticians,” declares the Asshl today in an editorial which is typical of the general comment upon the liayes bill in the American congress. ” The queation of the naturalization of the Japan««« in America is one of the most important matters of the present time,” continues the Asahi. "The tune has cripenrd for Japan to take a decisive step toward coopera tion with the better element of Amer ica, such as that represented by former president Roosevelt. "It ie time for this country to begin negotiations with the better class of Americans looking towards the legaliz ing of Japanese naturalization. "Naturalization will be the perma nent solution of the problem. The Ja|sneaein America should become American citizens. "Such attacks as that made upon ths Japanese In the Hayes hill are bycom ing wearisome. They are inspired only by the lower element in America. But it is time for Japan to act.” The Asahi is one of the leading per* of Japan. House Contains Skeptics Washington, Feb. 18. Members of thehou-e may demand that Ko'iert E. Peary exhibit his proofH to the world before voting him a gold medal and the thanks of congress. It was learned that the naval committee was not entirely unanimous on the proposi tion of bestowing honors upon the dis coverer of the Pole. One of the ladera of the house, who declined to allow the use of his name, sal I today that he was opposed to ac cepting proo'a of Mr. Peary that he discovered the Pole merely because the National Geographical society had ac- cepted them. City Wins IS Year Fight. Cleveland, Feb. 19.—After alight begun 15 years ago and waged at vari ous times by former Mayor Torn L. Johnson, 3-cent carfares will hereaftsr prevail in this city. A new franchise, placing the streetcar system und- r the supervision of the city, was approved in a referendum election yesterday by a majority of 8,100. The franchise was proposed by Judge R bert W. Tay- or, of the Federal court The Cleve land Trolley company must furnish the City with car service at cost, plus 6 per cent return to hol lers of stock. I Finds Buried City in Gautcmala. Belize, British Honduras, Fsb. 19. •Count M. Deperiguy, a French arch aeologist w ho han arrived here, reports the discovery of an ancient buried city in Guatemala, two miles from Bonque Viejo, near the frontier of BritishHon- duraa. He declares that the ruins in dicate that the inhabitants of the city had attained a high degree of civiliza tion, even approaching that of the Ro mans. The count will ask the consent of President Cabrera to excavate. ‘Oiled’ Doughnuts Poison Laurel, Md., Feb. 18 A mistake in the delivery of two barrels of oil near ly caused fatal results here when 30 persons were made violently ill by eat ing doughnuts prepared in machine oil instead of cooking oil. In two in stances entire families were on the sick list, and the physicians had hard work saving them. It developed today that the machine oil had been ordered by a hardware dealer, who received in stead the b irrel intended for a baker. Khartoum Prepares for Roosevelt. Khartoum, Fob. 19.—Although for mer President Roosevelt is not expec ted to arrive here for two weeks, the city is rapidly filling with visitors anx ious to greet him. It is estimated that Khartoum will entertain the greatest crowds in Its history when the distinguished American reaches hers. Germans In Street Riot Frankfort-on-the-Maine, Feb. 18.— Severest fighting occurred late today between the police and suffrage dem onstrators, and many wore wounded on both sides. The Socialists had organ ised five mass meetings which passed off in good order, but crowds gathered later. Direct Drimary to Pass. Springfield, III., Feb. 18.—Forty-six Republicans and 43 Democrats com bined in the Illinois house of repre sentatives toil ay and passed the direct legislative primary bill. This victory for the direct primary was followed immediately by another when the house concurrd in the senate amend ments to the main direct primary bill. All that ia left to put the two direct primary bills up to Governor Deneen for his signature in for the aena'e to concur in the house amendment*, Thia will be done. Washington, Feb. 22. Represente tive Hawley Uxiay Introduced a bill au thorising the o|iening of the surplus lands in Klsrnath reservation after the completion of allot iiienta to Klamath and Modoc Indians. As «x>n as the allotments are completed, a commis sion consisting o' one resident of Ore gon, one representative of the Interior department and one member of th" Klamath tribe are io be sp Ti nted at 310 a day to classify and epp< • •» the surplus lands, dividing thorn into egrl- cultural, timber, grazing and mineral lands, the claseiticaiion to be cornplet ed in eight months. The house naval committee today voted a tentative approval of Secretary Meyer's plan of reorganization, which will give the secretary the power to put his plan into practice for one year. Several hours again wore devoted by the seriate committee on interetato commerce today to listening to Attor ney General Wickereham expound his Vlewe concerning amendments to the interstate commerce law. It had t>een expected that he would complete his explanation of the ad ministration railroad bill today in time to permit a report to the senate. Mernhers of the committee were so much interested in what he had to say that they invited him to come back to morrow. It ie expected that the bill will be reported late in the week. In the opinion of Chairman Knapp, 01 the Interstate Commerce comm'e- sion and of his associates on that body, domestic freights are freer from unjust discrimination and more satisfactory in gi-neral than they ever were before. be to supply daily to employers lists of persons wanting work and to the latter list« of employers went laborers. Each county seat is to be a distribut ing center for the county in which it is located, applications for labor and laborers being sent to all point" in the county. The senate today passed the follow Ing bills introduced by Senator Piles: Appropriating 33'1,000 for the estab lishment of a lighthouse on Keilet’a Ibuff; a 360,000 lighthouse at Part ridge Point; 341,600 for small aids to navigation on Puget Sound; 3225,000 for a lightliouae tender for Alaska and 370,OuO to construct two revenue cut ter launches for Puget Sound. Senator Jones and Representative McCredie today introduced a bill ap propriating 3400,000 for the purchase of a site and the erection of an immi gration station at Tacoma. Senator Chamberlain today intro duced bills formerly offered by Senator Fulton, as follows: For final settle ment with the Clatsop tribe of Indians, appropriating 316,000 to pay for lands taken; 310,600 for the Tillamook tribo, 3".'""> for the Kathlamct band of the Chinook tribe. 36,000 for the Wheelappa tribe, for the lower band of the Chinook tribe, 37,000 for the Waukinum band of the Chinook tribe, and 31,5<'<> for the Nuc-Quee- Cba-Wi Muck tribe. Washington, Feb. 17.—Sentiment in the senate, as developed today, is generally favearable to the bill author izing the issuance of 330,000,000 of reclamation certificates. Senator Flint, Kean and Burton being the only ones to voice opposition. — - - Friends of the measure are confident that there will be a vote at an early day, and that they will have a safe majority to pass tbe bill. The arguments advanced by Senators Jones, Carter and Borah appealed strongly to the disinterested senators, several of whom privately expensed their belief that the bill should pass. This result is expected, unless Flint and ~ Kean have pledgee enough to defeat the measure, which is doubtful. The measure was championed by several senators, especially by Sena- tors Carter and Smith, Mr. Carter said that in severa cases reservoirs had been completed, although the ditches had not bean constructed. The effect was to hold with tbe water from set tlers. It was stated that the money would be all repaid by settlers. Making an appeal for general re strictions in the immigration laws and denouncing “Connonism,” Representa tive Dies, of Texas delivered a eiiring speech in tbe house today. "Speaker Cannon,” ho said, "like a Colossus, sits astride tbe house of .ep- reaentativee. Has the time come when only Cannon Republicans can form tbe majority of committees and only Cannon Democrats be placed upon the minorities of these committees’” The diplomatic and consular bill, carrying 3ll.19.48L which passed the house last week, was passed by the senate today. Washington, Feb. 21. Senator Aid- rich eaid today that if permitted to do ao he would undertake to run the gov ernment of the United States tor 3300,000,000 a year lesa than it now coats. He was not preaenting a formal pro- local, but was making a speech in the Senate on the question of creating a commission to reform the business methods of the government. He said the methods were obsolete and involved the annual loss of at least 1100,000,000. At his instance the bill was so amended as to provide that the commission should be composed en tirely of members of congress -five Senators and live representatives. Mr. Aldri. b spoke in reply to Sena tor Dolliver, who opposed the bill on the ground that it would create suspi cion in the minds of the public as to the methods of conducting the govern ment’s business. Mr. Dolliver said he feared the com mission would accomplish no g<xxi, but much evil. He regarded the bill as a proposal to enter upon a “blanket dis paragement of the government.” He declared the commission wolud cost not less than 331X1,000., and he said he thought there were too many commit tees already. The administration ship subsidy bill reached the bouse today through the filing of the report of the committee on merchant marine and fisheries, which had favorably acted upon it. The minority was granted ten days Washington, Feb. 16. — Reports in which to report against the hill. made by corporations under the law imposing a tax of 1 per cent on their Washington, Feb. 19. — The post net incomes are not to be open to pub office appropriation bill, reported to lic inspection unless congress makes the house late yesterday, makes no an appropriation specifically providing change in second class postage rates for accommodations and clerical help. and contains no ship subsidy provision. Somebody haa discovered that an act The bill carries nearly 3230,000,000, passed in 1882^expressly prohibits the which ie an increase over last year's secretary of the treasury from using of 35.000,000. any part of the appropriation of $100,- Four administration measures are 000 made by cong res- "for the expen sure of passage at this session of con ses of collecting the Federal incorpora gress. After confervn-ee with sen tion tax” in the employment of per ators and representatives, Piesident sons within tbe District of Columbia. Taft told callers today that he felt cer President Taft thinks that congress tain the amendments to the interstate intended that the returns, original and commerce law, the postal savings bank corrected, should be open to inspection, bill, the anti-injunction proposal and and in a letter to tbe secretary of the th" statehood bill would go through. treasury he has suggested that, if the The situation now seems to portend construction which seems to him to be that the Alaska legislative council bill, the right one is to be carried into exe the Enteral incorporation bill and sev cution, there must be an appropriation eral other measures desired by the of $50,000 for the specific purpoee. president will either fall by the way Following the president’s sugges side or be laid upon the shelf for an tion, Charles D. Norton, acting secre other session. tary of the treasury, has submitted to With a view to preventing specula the speaker of the house an estimate tion in Garey act lands. Representa for an appropriation of the amount tive Mundell today introduced a bill stated. authorising the secretary of the inter Strong opposition has developed to ior, oo application by any state or ter the publicity feature of the corpora ritory, to withdraw temporarily from tion tax. The issue now is squarely entry lands which are desired tor re before*congreae and much interest is clamation under that law. manifested whether that body wilt re It ia provided that formal applica enact the existing publicity provision tion for segregation, accompanied by by granting the appropriation recom maps of the propoeed irrigation pro mended. ject, must be submitted within one Jones Drops Whitman Fight. year from date of withdrawal or else the withdrawal will be revoked. Washington, Feb. 23.—The original Jones bill, proposing to transfer the Washington, Feb. 18.— Employment Walla Walla military reservation to for the unemployed is the subject of a Whitman college has been abandoned, bill that has been introduced by Repre the military committee being unwil sentative Garner. Republica. of Penn ling to report it. In its stead. Sena sylvania, who proposed, through the tor Jones is now asking the committee medium of the Postoffice department, to fix the price on lands of this reser to bring the employer in touch ao that vation and authorise the sale to Whit the labor market may be normal at man college, at a price which they de ail times. termine to be rea-onable. This prepo He proposes to authorize the post sition is up to the War department. master general to establish in the de partment and in every postoffice in Fight on Lafean Apple Box Bill. the United States “an information la Washington, Feb. 22. — Representa bor officer,” whose duty it shall tive Hawley warns apple growers that the house agricultural committee will Bill to Stop Hazing. have a hearing March 9, on the lafean Washington, Feb. 17. — Without a apple-package hill. He believes the word spoken in opposition, ths senate bill can be defeated in committee, but today passed a bill designed to deal recognises the need of active work. with the vexed queation of hating at He hopes representatives of Oregon West Point The author of the meas growers will be here at the hearing in ure is Senator Dupont of Delaware. March. It provides that the superintendent of Oregon Trunk Bridge Bill Passes. the academy shall make appropriate regulations for putting a atop to hat Washington, Feb. 22. The Ellia ing. A cadet charged with offences bill authorising the Oregon Trunk to that would involve hit dismissal la to build a bridge across the Columpbia have a general oourt martial. river at Celilo has passed the house. In a certain little New England vtl- lag" In the population of which Qua kers were long predominant, their In fluence kept the Fourth of July ’safe and sane" for many years before the pi "sent movement to that end was In augurated. But new people brought new ways, and the Fourth grew noisier and noisier. Little Luc y, brought up In the home of her Quaker grandparents, heard, as the day approac hed, much condemna tory talk of the violent and dangerous manner In which "the world’s people" were wont to celebrate. Hire was a shy, odd. quiet child, and when, on the eventful morning, she was rnlaaed just as the racket Megan, the first thought of her elders was that she bad been frightened into hiding. But at noon she appeared, running in from the long terraced garden, her hair blowing, her eyes bright, her little face radiant. "Where has thee been, child?" asked her grandmother. "We were becoming troubled about thee." "Thee needn't have worried, grand mother." was the confident reply. "I haven't been outside the garden, and 1 have been quiet and orderly, as thee told me. and I have borne wi loess against unseemly tumult besides. Hen ry Smith's garden runs back to ours, thee knows, and he has been behaving riotously all the morning, and I have been sitting on a fence post, watching him riot. "I told him when be began. 'Henry, thee ought to be ashamed” And every time he set off a cracker I said. ‘O Henry” And when he fired a pistol I told him weapons were wicked. But he kept right on rioting, and this aft ernoon he Is going to riot some more, and 1 have promised to sit on the post and rebuke him again." A dismayed grandmother, discerning the spirit beneath the letter of rebuke, forbade: and Henry was deprived of hl» audience. Boys are. of course, the chief pro moters and victims of our too explo sive Fourth, but the innate Instinct for explosiveness Is not theirs alone. It was an angelic blue-eyed cherub of a tiny girl who, at the close of the first celebration she was old enough to share, when the last torpedo was ex ploded. the last cartridge fired, the last firework set oft. on the glorious day, looked eagerly upward, still quivering with excitement, and cried aloud to the silver orb, floating in the heavens like one more beautiful balloon: “O moon, moon—bust!" DRIVING AN ELEPHANT. Nine Thousand Butle Union Mln ers Quit Work QUARREL WITH UNION ENGINEERS Western Federation of Miners Seeks to Compel Engineers to Affil iate. but Latter Refuse. Butte, Montana, Feb. 17.-—Through th« refusal of 137 engineers manning the big hoists of mines to go to work thia morning in their effort to pull apart from the jurisdiction of the Western Federation of Miners and force the mining companies to recog nize the International Engineers* un- , ion No. 138, all except three mines were compelled this morning to sus pend operations, throwing 9,000 men into idleness. The Silver Bow, the Berkeley and the Mountain Consolidated mines of the Amalgamated Copper compsmy are still operating, but with crippled forces. Senator Clark’s smelter was forced to suspend this morning and within four days the Amalgamated smelters at Great Falla and Anaconda, employ ing 5,000 men, will also be forced to shut down. Ten per cent of the smel termen were laid off this morning. Less than 500 miners are at work in Butte today, every company in camp being tied up as a result of the squab ble, which is purely between union organizations, no question of wages or hours being involved. Miners and smeltermen refuse to handle ore hoisted by International en gineers and the companies steadfastly refuse to accord the new union recogni- ! tion. Because of the great responsibility entailed, the companies will refuse to permit any but experienced Butte en gineers to man the engines. With the closing of the coal mines, lumber mills and stone quarries, to follow the suspen sion of the smelters, 18,000 men will be rendered idle in Montana and Wy oming. The trouble between the hoist engin eers and the miners baa been of long standing, and baa occasioned much bit terness on both sides. It reached a point last fall where the miners re fused to go into the shafts where en gineers who refused to affiliate with the Western Federation were employed. The miners demanded that tbe engin eers either join tbe Western Federa tion or leave tbe mines. This tbe en gineers refused to do and tbe miners appealed to the operators to discharge the engineers or endure a strike. Tbe operators at first decided to keep the engineers, but liter, when the supply of ore in the bunkers began to run low and threatened tbe big smelters with a shutdown, they capit ulated to the miners. At this juncture the smeltermen, numbering several thousand, stepped into the fight, and used strong meas ures to compel the engineers to join the Western Federation. The mine operators, threatened with serious fin ancial loss, joined with the miners and smeltermen in enforcing tbe demand, and the engineers capitulated. “The dog is man's companion: the elephant Is his slave,” writes Sir Sam- uel W Baker in "Wild Beasts and Their Ways" The dog shares with his master the delight of hunting, and defends him from an enemy's attack; but an enemy might kill an elephant’s mahout, and the huge beast would not interfere to save him. Te never vol unteers his services, although he can be trained to do certain acts, for he has a wonderful capacity for learning. But he will not do them unless he is ordered to by his mahout, to whose guidance he submits, because he knows that disobedience will bring punish ment. CARNEGIE GETS BUMPED. The mahout, sitting on the elephant’s neck, governs the animal by an Iron Private Car Struck by Engine and hook and spike, which resembles a Badly Shaken Up. boat-hook, and weighs from four to Pittsburg. Feb. 17.—Andrew Car six pounds. The mahout drives the elephant by digging the point of the negie and the members of the party spike Into its head, and pulls him back | that will accompany him to California by inserting the hook in the tender are considerably bruised as the result t>ase of the ears. Without the hook of an arccident in the local yards of the elephant Is like the donkey with the Pennsylvania railroad that might have been fatal. out the stick. He obeys not from af The steel king and his party were fection, but because he knows that ha preparing for dinner when they were w ill be punished if he disobeys. struck by an incoming train. They An elephant whose mahout roleshim were in the private car Olivet, which responds to the secret signs of his will carry them to the Pacific coast. driver. The gentle pressure of the Every person in the car was thrown mahout's toe. the compression of his to the floor, and several of them re knee, the delicate touch of hts heel, ceived painful cuts and bruises. The or the slightest swaying of his body engine of the incoming train struck to one side, guides the mighty beast the Olivet directly opposite the window as a ship is guided by an almost Im at which Carnegie was sitting. perceptible movement of the rudder. But the mahout must himself be cool No News or Missing Tug. and free from all nervousness It he Washington, Feb. 17. — It was expects the elephant to obey him. learned today that a tug sighted off Illustrating the fact that a poor Mauntauk Point by the whaleback driver makes a disobedient elephant. steamer Bavview was the naval tug Sir Samuel says that a man may sit Apsche. The Apache is one of the a horse gracefully, but If he has not vessels dispatched to search for the When the gift of a "good hand" there will missing government tug Nina, be little comfort for the animal and the Apache was sighted by the Bay no ease for the rider. A rider with view, she was thought to be the lost a "bad hand" makes that fact known ship. There is little doubt in naval ____________ to the horse almost as soon as he seats circles here thst the Nina has found- result ._ is I ere<'. *n<' that her crew of 32 men have himself in the saddle. ’ The __ ______ that the horse becomes nervous, and been drowned or they would have been does not perceive what his master heard from by this time. w ishes him to do. One Explosion a Month. The elephant Is not bitted, and there Valleljo, Cal., Feb 17. - Though fore Is not disturbed by a "bad hand." But it the mahout Is nervous, or hesi there ia a deep official silence at Mare tates. or vacillates, he will be sure to Island navy yard concerning the ex plosion on th» torpedo boat destroyer have a “bad knee" or a "bad toe." His Hopkins, th.- , ossible result of the in mood will Influence his muscles, and quiry ie a subject of intense interest. the elephant feels that the mahout H'gh naval officials will start's sweep does not exactly know what he Is ing investigation to determine whether about. Instead of obeying Instantly or not something ie radically wrong the pressure of knee or toe. the animal with the workmanship on a boat when vacillates, swings his head, becomes ten explosions take place in its boiler unsteady, and it engaged tn hunting room in as many months. or scenting a tiger, turns round and Stensland May Go Back To Pen. runs away—made a coward by his ma Springfield, III., Feb. 17.—The Su hout's nervousness. preme court today held that the state The only way In which a man can P,role l,w. *■ unconstitutional. The make his wife agree with him that a decision will, it ia believed, affect the woman guest has stayed too long, 1« freedom of Paul Stensland, the convie- | ted banker. It may compel him to r*> for him to make leva to the guest i turn to the penitentiary. « /