. 71 EM VOL. XXI. SALEM, OREGOX, MONDAY, MAY 15. 1911. O. 115. D OIL COMPANY IS ORDERED .DISSOLVED ftk tiitta m 'MMILIUUUUI STANDAR OCTOPUS IS GIVEN ITS DEATH BLOW WHEN LOWER COURT IS SUSTAINED DRY AS DUST PHASES OF ITS HISTORY THRILL WITH LIFE AS TOLD DY CHIEF JUSTICE The Most Momentous and Far-Reaching Case Ever Decided in Any Court in the World Combination was as Ruthless as It Was Successful Says, the Venerable Justice Lower Court Is Sustained, Except as to Minor Details, Which Means That Standard Must Pay Fine of Twenty-Nine Mil lion Dollars Company Declared Nine-Million Dividend Today. Declares Dividend. the United States court at Washington New York, May 15. A quar terly dividend of $9 was de clared by the Standard Oil today The declaration calls tor the dis bursement of $9,700,000 among the stockholders. The dividend was published' several hours before Chief Jus tice White read the decision of supreme ordering the dissolution of the trust. Nearly Killed Six. , Vancouver, B. C, May 15. ' ' Is Against Mudero. San Diego, Cal May 15. Captain Pryce, who led the Mex- lean tnsurrectos in the capture of Tia Juana, and now- plans an aggressive campaign for the HILL WILL NOT BUILD TO EUGENE IS ALSO PESSIMISTIC AS TO THE BUILDING OP A OflOX DEPOT IN PORTLAND, AND TALKS OP AN I.VDEPENTENT DEPOT. This morning's Oregonian men tioning the visit of Louis Hill to Portland, says: Mr. Hill and party left last night for Seattle, wfcere they will remain today. They will spend a day In the vicinity of Wenatchee, Wash., to in spect the orchard districts, and then will continue East. Inspection of the Oregon Electric, as originally planned, will not be at tempted this time. Mr. Gray, who remained In Portland to begin his new duties will take a trip over that road as soon as he finds it conveni ent. ' " ' The failure of Mr. Hill to accom pany Mr. Gray over this line, he ad mitted, meant practically the aban donment of the plans to extend the road to Eugene this year. In spite of the recent utterances of Julius Kruttschnitt, vlca-presldent of the Harrlman system, implying that the union depot ' situation in Portland was virtually In the hands of the Hill interests, Mr. Hill talked discouraglngly of a union depot pro ject. He said that, even though the two systems agreel on a construction policy, it would be Impossible for them to agree on the way the station should be managed after It was com pleted. He spoke favorably of the erection of an. Independent depot by the Hill forces. There was no confirmation at Sa lem of the report that all operations have been suspended for this season on the Oregon Electric. Right of Way Agent McDowell has a force at work between) Salem and Albany, and In some cases fancy prices are paid the farmers to cross their landB. That does not look like quitting operations With the Southern Pacific letting eon- tracts to electrify their West Side lines, there Is not much danger of stopping extensions of the Oregon Electric. . - UNITED MESS LEASED WIRE. J Washington, May 15. The Stand ard Oil trust is killed. By a decision of the United States supreme court today, read by Chief Justice White, the decision of the eighth United States circuit court ren dered in St Louis on November 20, 1909, branding the oil trust as a mon opoly and ordering its dissolution un der the Sherman anti-trust law, was affirmed. Chief Justice White began reading his decision shortly after 4 o'clock this afternoon before a small audi ence of lawyers and business men who packed the supreme court cham ber to the doors and who sat with bated breath waiting for the word which would scotch the $500,000,000 combine, the greatest in the world. Beginning with a long and intricate preamble of the case In its legal as pects, the chief Justice warmed to his subject by degrees and it was not un til he had spoken for nearly an hour that the words fell from his lips which sealed the doom of the octopus. A Ruthless Combination. Slowly and painstakingly, the chief Justice went over every angle of the famous case from the time when John D. Rockefeller, William G. Rockefel ler, Henry H. Rogers and others are alleged to have formed the conspiracy away back in 1879 to capture the oil trade of the whole country by a com bination as ruthless as It proved to be successful. None of the human Interest of the Standard's growth was touched upon by the Chief Justice as he, with great dramatic emphasis rolled out the story of the Standard's growth. Only the legal aspects of the combination the dry as dust phases of Its his torywere set forth, but so vividly did he portray them that even the dead facts took on life and his hear ers thrilled with Interest as he pro ceeded with a most drastic arraign' ment. A Dramatic Situation. Rapping his desk and raising his voice from time to time as he drove his points home, Chief Justice White eloquently summed up the tremen dous magnitude of the case and the gigantic work before the court in de elding the points at issue. Not for a long time was it possible to say What the decision would be and the auditors of the aged jurist sat with straining ears and in tense atti tudes, eagerly watching for the word which would first foreshadow the dic tum of the court Below the bench newspaper men were tense with ex citement and at their side, waiting for the word, were the messengers who were to bear to the waiting country the decision the most momentous according to Attorney-General Wick ersbam, ever rendered in an Ameri can court since the existence of the country. Finally, aftr even the associate Jus tlces of the court had begun to show eagerness, Chief Justice White struck the root of his decision. With raised voice and dramatic ges ture, he summed up the case for the prosecution, then for the defense and rendered the final verdict of the court, gravely and with such force as well befitted the vast importance of the dictum. Lower Court Sustained. ."Our conclusion is," he sad, '.'that Tons of brick tumbling from the top of the Jonathan Rogers block on Granville street, nearly killed six men at 11 o'clock this morning. Bryan Williams, provincial warden, was one of fhe victims. The falling mass felled him to the sidewalk, broke one leg, smashed open his head, Injured; his back and otherwise wounded him. R. S. Main, Harry O'Dorman and two others were rushed to the hospital in a rJollce ambu lance. Their legs were broken and they were unconscious when nlaoed upon the stretchers. conquest tf Lower California, says that he represents the lib- eral party of Mexico, which In- eludes Orozco and ;BIanco and ' two-thirds of the Mexican peo ple, but does not Include Fran cisco Madero. He says the elec tion of the latter to the presi dency is not conceivable, but that all opponents of Dla are working together to overthrow the present regime, ; When that accomplished, he said, the Lib erals will Indicate their choice for president. the decree of the lower court should be affirmed except as to minor mat ters concerning which we have indi cated that the decree should be modi fied. Our order, therefore, will be one of affirmance with directions, however, to modify except in accord ance with this opinion the court be low to retain Jurisdiction to the ex tent necessary to compel compliance with Its decree, and It Is so ordered." The court held that 30 days set by the lower court as the time within which the Standard OH company should be forced to comply with the EC1SI0H IS ATRIUr.lPU FOR LABOR SUPREME REVERSES LOIVER COURT PARIM "IMAGED" Looks Good to mm. Portland, Or., May 16. Juli us Kruttschnitt, vice-president of the Southern Pacific, and dl rector of maintenance and oper ation, left Portland today for San Francisco, whence he will return to New York. Kruttschnitt has been looking over the Harrlman properties In various parts of the Northwest for the last week aud a half. He expressed himself as well pleased with the railroad devel- opment in Oregon, Washington and. Idaho, and predicted that that there would be greater de- velopment work in the near fu- ture. Stands Pat on His Proposition to File the Referendum Pe titions Despite the Strong In fluence Brought .ta Bear. filed and the question of whether or not these legislative appropriations shall be approved will be left to the people," said Mr. Parklson, following the conference with Governor West. "I feel In duty bound to the people who signed these petitions to see that they are filed in accordance with their expressed wishes." O' (Continued from Page 4.) o TELLS HOW HE KILLED HIS WIFE JURY PRONOUNCE THE MURDER DELIBERATE AND WILFUL AND FURTHER DECLARE THE MUR DERER IS NOT INSANE. r UNITED PBESN LBARKI WIHH.1 Murphysboro, 111., May 15. Fol lowing the verdict of a coroner's jury, which declared that he was guilty of "wanton, wilful and mall- clous murder," and was sane, James Freeman, 72, today in his cell told how he killed his wife, 38, because he suspected she was unfaithful. 'I have known for 14 months," said Freeman, "that my wife was visiting a doctor in his office at Car bondale. She hsd an operation per formed 14 months ago. I begged her to give up the physician for the sake of our children, but she would not. "As my wlfe. went into the cellar to get butter and eggs to take to town, I placed my left arm around her neck, and1 cut her throat from ear to ear. Neighbors talked me out of killing myself. My wife went to the doctor, and I believed her to be more In the wrong." THE PETITIONS ARE NOT HIS He Places No Faith In Political Promises, nut, Like Editor Cate, of t'o Cottage Grove Leader, Seems to Hold That "In Politics You Only Get What You Have a Club Hit? Enough to Compel Ac tion With." INSTALLS SANITARY FOUNTAIN IX THE HOTEL MARION In keeping with his usual efforts to please not only the guests of the ho tel but also those who have occasion to pass through the lobby on busi ness, Charlie Savage, manager of the Hotel Marlon, has had Installed one of the new sanitary drinking foun tains In the hotel lobby near the cigar case. By turning a small wheel a little stream of good water slowly shoots up from the center of the fountain. After drinking, a little turn to the left shuts off the water. There is no spurting and no danger of getting sprinkled. This new Invention over comes the antl-drlnklng cup which forbids the use of public drinking cups at fountains. THE ROM IS COREY WILL QUIT PRESIDENT Gnus. ALSO SECRETARY MORRISON AIIO Mil MITCHELL SET FREE United States Supreme Court Holds That Their Sentences to Imprisonment by the Courts of the District of Columbia Were Illegal and Could Only Be Punished by Fine They Were Sentenced for Contempt for. Publishing Matter Or dered Suppressed by the Court Decision Is Far-Reaching in Effect, and Labor Leaders Are Delighted. All efforts to "manage" ex-Editor Parkinson, of the Portland . Labor Press and get him to throw down the referendum petitions on about a mil lion dollars of appropriations, have Droved unavailing. He seems to be beyond the control of Governor West Labor Leader Harris, and the other Influential people who are trying to save the Eugene Institution from be ing tied up for two years. Parkinson and Cate, the Cottage Grove editor, seem to act on prlnci pies that are not variable and chang eable, and are very disagreeable t&c- tors for the practical politician to handle. Cate was about the only man on the Cottage Grove committee who would not come through and drop the fight. When 100 of the biggest men Eugene agreed to Bign up a contract to allow Nesmlth county to be created by the next legislature, even agreeing tK the very boundary lines, Cate said No. The agreement can be kicked over as soon as they have got what they want. In politics you onlyget what you have a club big enough to compel action with." Parkinson seems to be consistent In this view and despite the urgent ap peals of Governor West to at least hold the referendum petitions for a short time, adheres to his determina tion to fight them. The time for filing thete petitions expires Friday and Parkinson insists that they will be filed before that time. He takes tin) view that they are not his petitions, but belong to those who signed them, and that he nor no one else but the signers has a right to withhold them In a final attempt to dissuade Park lson from carrying out his announced Intention, Governor West went to Portland Saturday for a conference with Parklson. The meeting took place at the Seward Hotel at 5:30 o'clock Saturday afternoon. The con ference continued for nearly two hours, but Parklson remained obdur ate and would not recede. "The referendum petitions I . have circulated and lmolving the Univer sity of Oregon appropriations will be RUMOR ALSO SAYS THAT IT WILL . NOT BE OF HIS OWN VOLITION THE HEAD JANITOR WILL ALSO LOSE HEAD AND ALL. " That the string of the political kite which H. C. Corey, chief clerk of the office of secretary of state, was so gaily flying several weeks ago has al ready broken and that Secretary of State Olcott after a consideration of his application to remain has made up his mind to deny It, is the substance of a story which has been flouting about In the corridors of the state capltol building for several days and which can lay claim to a foundation as solid as bed rock. When Olcott shortly after assuming the office of secretary of state offered the chief clerkship to Corey he de clined it on the ground that he had been urged by hi ifrlends to make the race for the secretary of stateshlp at the next general election, and that he had made up his mind to do so. Re cently, however, as the story runs, he reconsidered, and Indicated his will Ingness to remain and while Olcott had apparently been considering, the subject, the story has it, that be has made up his mind to say nay, as strong and as firmly as Corey said nay to him when he offered him the (3,000 position on a platter. Here Is Another Story. Washington, May 15. President Samuel Gompers secretary Frank Morrison and Vice President John Mitchell of the American Federation of Labor will not have to serve Jail sentences. The supreme court of the United States in a decision rendered today by Judge Lamar, reversed the deci sion of the court of appeals of the District of Columbia, sentencing the men for contempt in disobeying a court injunction in the case of the Buck's Stove and Range company of St.. Louis and dismissed the whole case. The decision In favor of the laW leaders was based on the contention that the case was purely a civil one and that the contempt, If any, was Shown, was purely civil. In such case, It was declared, a Jail sentence was entirely unwarranted and If any punishment were Inflicted nothing more Bevere than a line ccjld be Im posed, The case was remanded to the low er court with Instructions that the action be dismissed. In ordering the dismissal It was pointed out that the differences between the Buck's Stove and Range company and the Ameri can federation of Labor had already been adjusted. Call It a Great Triumph. Labor leaders are Jubilant overtke against themselves, which would not have been the case had the controver sies been separate. This Is purely a civil case. The only relief was the Im position of a fine, payable by the de fendants to the Buck's company. There was a fatal variance With this procedure when the court Imposed a Jail sentence. This was fundamental ly erroneous." Gompers Is on a train en route' to Washington today and could not be reached this morning. Secretary Morrison is elated over the outcome of the case. , . ... . . Leaden Are Pleased. ...,-...., "Naturally I am pleased that the supreme court has supported us." said Morrison: "I always contended that Justice Wright's decision In this case was wrong. I will now. eat and expect to enjoy my meals." Samuel Gompers was informed of the supreme court's decision by a United Press representative when he arrived in Washington 'today. "I am greatly gratified,", he said. "I think It was the opinion of the ma jority of Americans that Judge Wright's sentence of Mitchell, Morri son and myself was unjust, cruel and unusual particularly In the alleged constructive contempt proceedlngs-j-and that his language was Intemper ate and unjudicial. I am gratified that his decision was reversed, but victory. It Is regarded by most of I them as one of the blggeBt triumphs that labor has ever attained In the courts and Is considered the turning point In labor's fight. The decision, read by Justice La mar and concurred in unanimously by the other members of the court, exhaustively reviewed the entire case. "The Court of appeal of the District of Columbia held that this contempt case was not a part of the main cause between the American Federation of Labor and the Buck's Stove and Range company," said the decision. "Yet the three defendants were called as witnesses and made to testify dissatisfied that the supreme court did not decide the question, princi ples and contentions In the proceed ing." Gompers evidently was greatly elated at the decision. He had been very nervous lately, but with the re ceipt of the news today all his wor ries appeared to fade away from him and his high spirits were remarkable. CIiisnImcs Contempt Cases. Justice Lamar said contempt cases were of several classes. The princi pal, he said was that in which a de fendant first refused to obey a court (Continued from Page 5.) BUILT TO LAS' Soaring on outstretched wings right beside the above story Is another one to the effect that C. E. Rockwell, head Janitor, is troubled with constant visions of the gilded ax and that It Is apt to descend upon him at anytime. According to this story Rockwell was advlHed some time ago that lie was scheduled to be 'decapitated but that he would be permitted to remain un til June 1. Since then, however, the story says that the secretary of state has changed his mind and that while the hour of execution has not been set that It Is not far distant. Just why he has changed his mind no one really seems to care to say but poli ticians say that In this case there Is a "nigger In the woodpile" a real Senegambian but whether this In true and as to whether the public ever gets a 'glimpse at that "nigger's" bead remains to be teen. 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