The Oklahoma Post. (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 105, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 23, 1906 Page: 1 of 8
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N
I -
THE OKLAHOMA POST.
THE MOST COMPLETE LEASED WIRE REPORT IN OKLAHOMA OR INDIAN TERRITORY—PUBLISHERS PRESS SERVICE.
FIFTH YEAR, ! 8SW8& & IT
OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA; SEPTEMBER 23, 1906-SUNDAY.
' Week Days, 23m*.
PEACE MAY
BE RESULT
Outlook Appears Bright-
er for Cuba Than at Any
Previous Time
MAY BE A SLIP
However in the Present
Negotiations of Secretary
Taft and Party
A STRONG PROTEST
May Yet be Necessary, Despite Pres-
ent Indications and the Government
is Taking All Necessary Precautions
Troops Are Being Assembled and
Other Preparations Are Made.
BEADS LIKE •
FAIRY TALE:
who have been inspecting the German i
maneuvers have informed the depart-
ment they have sailed for homo in
accordance to the urgent calls for |
them. There is an impression in i
some quarter^ that General Barry may
be selected to command the forces in j
Cuba in the event of armed interven- __ +
tion. It is hinted here touight that +
one of the probabilities is the order hiju'V of Paul +
ingof a new election in Cuba. In that 1MHI J U1 I dill nit HO
case the American force, would be |a 11(1 Wllicll HilS Bt'lMl
left to conduct the election and pre
Berve order, it is said by officials. Found
WEATHER FORECAST.
+
Washington, Sept. 22.—Fore- +
cast: Oklahoma and Indian 4*
Territory—Fair Sunday and +
Monday. <•
❖ _
++♦«++♦♦+++++♦♦++
BIG FIGHT
ON BAILEY
Jority here travel with anything like
the normal degree of success.
That, one of the chief directors of
(he system met death in one of his
own cars has had an effect far ex-
reeding that of the indictments some
timet issued in America after similar
disasters.
WILL BE CLARK'S GUEST.
Montana Millionaire to Take
ding Party on Tour.
wed LOOTER'S "DOPE"
(Contains Arabian Knights
Story of Revelry and Do-
mestic Intrigue
Des Moines, Iowa, Sept. 22.—Sena-
tor W. A. Clark, of Montana, will take
a Des Moines bride and groom on
their wedding tour in his private car.
The bride is the beautiful Grace
Baker, the grand niece of the multi-
millionaire copper king, who -has lived |
in a modest basement flat in this city «« . ...r,,, /vtTU DTTPADH
and who was married Wednesday to Jl AH ) liLUU^ KnLUlll'
Frank A. Cicholas, the local yard
master for the Minneapolis and St. j
Louis railroad.
They will first visit St. Paul, going
thence to Denver where the Montana
senator will meet them and take
them for a vi.%t at (his home in
Butte.
mean that young Stensland cannot be |
Indicted later but gives a sort of ver
iflcation to the rumors that he bought
immunity by surrendering his father
Receiver Fetset unearthed two more
forgeries today tor $15,000. They are
in the form of notes of |7,500 each
ostensibly signed by I gnat z Koehler, !
a furniture dealer on cOtober lo. 1895
Koehler says he signed neither of
them.
"It is odd that the state hank exam
iner could overlook two forged notes
aggregating $15,0bo for ten years." re-
marked Receiver Fetzer.
Now in Progress
Throughout State
of Texas
HE IS CONDEMNED
hi t nineasiircil Terms for
(irafting Proclivities By
His Neighbors
POPE LEO'S REMAINS.
Will be Allowed to Remain In St.
Peters for Several Months.
Home, Sept. 22.—The arrangements
for the removal of the body of Pope
Leo XIII from St. Peters to the Lat-
eral! have been upset owing to the
fact that the sculptor will be unable
to complete the monument before next
March. Cardinal Rampolla, who s
arch priest of the cathedral of 8t. Peter,
urged the necessity of the tomb there
empty lest the present pope should
die. He wishes to hasten the removal
of Pope Leo's remains so as to have
thorn placed in the provisional tomb in
the Lateran within the present year,
tis already arranged, but Cardinal Sa
Glasgow, Sept. 22. —'The new Donald Sr IHONt; RESOLUTION
(hut I Iw, enul>« l not HVnllilblo and
sou liner Cassandra sailed from here
today on her maiden voyage to Mon-
It real with a big complement of pass ^ ^ , ..
[engers. The steamship was given an I Denouncing t e Course o
i enthusiastic send-off.
CUBABELONGS
TO AMERICA
And Will Eventually He
Taken, Says Senator
Heveridffe
HE FAVORS ACTION
Immediately and Says Amer-
ican Troops Slionld Enter
Island to Stay
Havana, Sopt.. 22.—There Is no mate-
rial rhanue In the situation in Cuba,
Mthough the prospects for peace seem
slightly Improved tonight. Secretary
Taft spent the evening in conference
with the Insurgent chiefs with a view
of Inducing them in agree to the ap-
pointment of a committee empowered
to act in behalf of all elements in
Blraighlenlng out the tangle.
When this suggestion was first made
to the insurgent chieftains by Secre-
tary Taft. Orestus Kerrar replied that
ii was impossible without consulting
with the imprisoned liberals in Hn-
>ana. Secretary Montalvo offered to
allow these political prisoners to at-
tend the conference under guard.
Ask for Freedom From Taft.
The prisoners, however, refused, but
slated that they would accept tempo-
rary freedom if the American commls-
sion secured their release. Captain Me ^
Coy requested the chief of t-he principe j,
jail in the name of the commission to +
grant the attendance of the prisoners^
at a consultation. +
Jose Miguel Gomez, Juan Gualberto i...
Gome/., and General Monteagndo, Gen +
cral Garcia Velen, General Demetro +
Castillo, were allowed to attend the +
conference. They arrived at Mariano, +
where Minister Morgan has his home +
iate this evening. Senor Guerra and +
Cot. R.'laniotir and other insurgents ^
from Plnar del Alo were also late In +
arriving. .j.
As a result of the conference of lib +
eral leaders with Secretary Taft at +
Marlano and at Secretary Taft's re _j.
qiiest, the revolutionists appointed a
rommitte of eight members, with Sen '
;ttor Zayas as chairman and invested
the committee with full power to con- 7
(iuot negotiations for peace. If peace ^
Is possible at all, this step is a greai
advance toward Its realization.
Committee is Named.
Captain Smith, representing Amer-
icans in the Isle of Pines, visited Sec
tetary Taft today urging I he appoint-
ment of a mayor for tne Isles without
the sanction of the government to sue-
succeed Mayor Sanchez, a liberal who
has resigned. Captain Smith slated
to the Americans that It Is their In-
tention to preserve order
Rumors of the intended resignation
of President Palma tonight appear un-
founded.
Physician's Death Mysterious. +
Of a Dual Personality Talking to Him-
self Through His Pen—One Page
Pays Tribute to His Love For a | The Cassandra Is a. twin-screv
Beautiful Woman, Another Contains steamer of 8.000 tons gross, and is in-
„ w ^ tended for the passenger trade bv
Passionate Verses and So On. tw(Jen Glascow an4 Canada. She is ot
- - the shelter-deck type, 465 feot in
length, 53 feet in breath, and 40 feet
Chicago, .Sept. 22.—The diary of Paul | in depth.
O. Stensland, defaulting president ot
Since He Has Been in Office Are
Passed in Various Towns—The
Battle is to be Carried to the Legis- postponed until next, spring,
lature and His Defeat Accomplished.
that the space is not available and
that the changing of the burial place
would savor of lack of respect.
Owing to delicacy In submitting the
mutter to Pope Plus, lest he should
believe that he Is'not destined to live
long, the removal probably will be
Chicago, September 22.—Dr.
II. Demmlng. a well-known
Chicago physician, 63 years
old, died suddenly tonight in a
room at the Palmer 'house,
where he was called to attend
a woman who registered as
Cora Fisher of Birmingham,
Ala., but wno afterwards told
the police that she was Lizzie
Shaw of Pana, 111.
The woman arrived at the
hotel early in the day, was
assigned to a room and soon
afterward sent, for Dr. Dem-
ming, saying she was ill. The
doctor called subsequently sev-
eral times during the after-
noon.
About R in the evening he
arrived again and soon after-
wards Miss Shaw called for
help, the physician having sud-
denly fallen dead.
Ai police headquarters the
woman said that while talking
with her concerning her case
Dr. Demmlng took two tablets
from his pocket and put them
in his mouth. On her request
that she be given one the doc-
tor refused, saying they were
for dytpepsi.i. A few moments
later u was taken violently
ill am' died in great agony.
Det ' tvf Kelly of the Cen-
tral retail reported that. Dr.
Demmlng was nude except for
an uidersblrt and that the
womai was also but. partly
dressed when he reached the
room shortly after the doctor's
death. The woman was held
pending the inquest.
the Milwaukee Avenue Savings Bank,
now on his way back from Morocco
to answer tor embezzlements exceed-
ing $1,000,000, was found today in a
vault in the looted institution.
Through it runs the Arabian Nights
story of revelry,-financial and domes
tic
Houston. Texas. Sept. 22.—Opposi-
tion to United States Senator Bailey
in Texas arising from disclosures In
connection with the ouster proceed-
ings of Missouri against the Waters-
Pierce and Standard Oil companies
+ * + + + * + + + + *** + + + -«'*
4- *
+ Mystery In Woman's Death.
Mormons Erect Tabernacle.
La Grande, Ore., Sept. 22—The
$50,000 Mormon tabernacle recently
completed here was dedicated today „ddlt lonaT^expression "tonTKM" In
with impressive ceremony and in the ! maM ,11W<|1 |n several counties or *
V u, presence of a large gathering of fol- |hp 9tat„ in wMch resolutions were +
...... intrigue, wastefulness and pleas- '°ve™ ™ fT?",l ti" """Sil! submitted demanding the next leglsla- *
* lure during U>e hanker", leisure hours .he Northwest. The building, which votp aB„ln.sl the re-election ot +
+ I during the same years that he was 11,4 th« only Mormon tabernacle outside )hn Texas senator when his name is *
* known to the business world as u man the state of Utah, is a large and hand- presented for confirmation +
* 1 of spotless character. The diary is ! some edifice with a seating capacity of Denounce Bailey Methods. +
+ the marvelous record of a creature of several thousand. A mass meeting at Minota, Texas, *
jitlanta in a Turmoil
Over Negro A ssaults on
Women; 8 Shot DoWn
Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 23.—Four at-
tempts within four hours tonight, five
negroes killed by unknown parties,
the riot calls sounded to clear the
♦ streets, every policeman In the city
**■ summoned to the station house, any
+ number of negroes pulled from street
i cars, beaten and cut and every negro
♦ in the city being chased from the heart
♦ | of the city by mobs of angry men and
+ boys is a brief summary of the bloody
+ Saturday night in Atlanta tonight
4 The women on whom the attempted
+ assaults were made were Mrs. Jessie
+ Chaff in, living near the soldier's home
+ on the outskirts of Atlanta.
+ Miss Alma Allen, of 182 Davis street.
4.4.4.4.^4. + ^ Mrs. J. F. Arnold, 187 Fulton street.
Mrs. Mattie Holeombe, 275 Magno-
. , lla street.
Target Practice for Warships. The dead negroes:
Provlncetown, Mass., Sept. 22— I WILL DURHAM, bootblack at the
Eight battleships of the Atlantic i beland barber snop.
squadron, commanded by Rear Af -; Qne unjtnown negro on Broad street,
miral Robley i) Bvans, are engaged dumb negr0 in tront ot
ln their annual torget Practice off Klmball house.
this port todav. The vessels- include1
+ + + *+'> + ♦♦•
tne flagship Maine, the Illinois, the j
Indiana, the Koarsarge, the Kentucky,
the Missouri, the Iowa and the Ala-
bama. All of these ships took part
in the recent reylew at pyster Bay.
AMERICANS TO OCCUPY CUBA.
Is the Feeling that Predominates at
Washington.
Washington, Sept. 22.—Although
gratified over the reports of a possible
peace agreement, the war department
officials are convinced that an Amer-
ican army of occupation will be ln
Cuba before long.
They view the Taft mission In the
most pessimistic light and many of
ihein express the personal belief that
ii will ultimately fail in its purposes.
Never since the days of the Spanish-
American war has there been such ac-
tivity at the war and navy depart-
ments.
Much Work Has Been Done.
The greater portion of the work ot
the past two weeks has been devoted
to the naval branch. The heads of bu-
reaus in the army branch of the sei
vice are now bending every effort, to
Cancer Specialists Meet.
Heidelberg, Germany, Sept. 22—
Many cancer specialists from America,
England and the contiftental nations
are gathered here for the internation-
al conference of cancer investigators,
which will open tomorrow at the uni-
versity. Papers will be read by Pro-
fessors Von Leyden of Berlin
Czerrty of Heidelberg university, Dr. j
Ehrllch of Berlin, Itr. Hammond of personality, talking to himself
London, Professor Fourchet of Paris fcla
and other famous specialists. The
Two unknown negroes at the cor-
ner of Pryor and Richardson streets.
At midnight the fire department was
called to Decatur and Richardson
streets to turn the hose on the negro
bowery and drive the loafers away.
Mayor Woodward and the leading cit-
izens of the city came to the heart or
the city to plead for peace and quiet.
The papers here predict that when
morning comes a dozen negroes will
be found dead in various quarters ot
the city through which they were
chased during the night.
Atlanta is a perfect bedlam tonight
The first attempted assault occurred
this afternoon at 3 o'clock when an
unknown negro fame up behind Mrs.
Chaffin, young woman of 24 years,
who ijras walking in the woods near
her home and grabbed her. She
jerked loose and nn to her home. Lat-
er when she camj; out again he was
hiding in the grass - d grabbed at her
again. She ran back and got a gun
pnrf <tr«w tt hilt tViA nPern flpH Into
the woods. He is being pursued by an
armed posse of 300 men.
At midnight Mrs. Frank Arnold
went on her back porch. As she
stepped Into the shadow a negro
crouching near by sprung at her and
grabbed her in his arms. She screamed
and he fled. He was pursued by thous-
ands.
A negro nam^d Henry Green has
been captured and landed in jail as a
■suspect.
Mrs. Hattle Holeombe, 275 Magno-
lia street went to her front window to
close the blinds, and as she did so, a
negro on the outside reached for her.
She screamed and another posse was
organized.
Miss Alma Allen, of 182 Davis street,
was in her baca yard shortly after
dusk when a negro pursued her. She
screamed and fell into a faint. A posse
started in pursuit.
Mayor Woodward and Mayor-elect
Joyner with the police commissioners
are down town speaking tr> the mob
trying to quiet them. At midnight five
hundred men and boys marched to the
union station and smashed out all of
the lights in a waiting passenger train
are being carried there.
A riot call Was sounded at midnight
summoning all police off duty to the
station house.
The Are department has been called
out. and turned the hose on all the ne-
gro dives in the tenderloin. At mid-
night all negroes were ordered from
the streets. The governor stands
ready to order out the state troops It
npnn
Four companies under command of
Col. Alfred L. Anderson began pa-
trolling the streets at midnight. Not
a negro is to be found on the streets
at this hour. The number of known
dead increased by three since mid-
night.
Annie Laurie, a negro woman, was
killed in the suburbs.
Unknown negro killed at the corner
of Peters street and Hill avenue.
Unknown negro killed on Marietta
street near postofflce.
A mob of ir 0 men marched out of
Peters street, a great negro thorough-
fare. broke open Pierson's hardware
store and confiscated 150 pistols and
thousands of cartridges. One hardfare
store sold $1,000 worth of pistols since
rioting began.
Governor Terrell Is up at the man
slon receiving reports.
When morning dawns it is believed
the dead will number a score.
Only two white men reported in-
jured. They are Frank Scudder,
fractured skull, probably fata!; and
A. C. Moore, shot in tin* leg by an
Chicago, Sept. 22.—The hand-
somely gowned woman found
floating In I>ako Michigan off
the suburb of Evans ton last
night is believed now to have
been murdered for her Jewelry.
One theory was that she was
silled and thrown into the lake
from a mysterious yacht the
identity Of Which the police
are trying to learn. A strange
craft was* seen off shore the
day before the murder and, If
the crew can be found, It is
suspected that light may be
thrown on the nature or the
tragedy.
Another hypothesis Is that
the woman was a passengeT on
one of the lake liners from a
neighboring resort and efforts
are being made to leiorn at the
offices of the various steamship
companies whether any one
answering the victim's descrip-
tion embarked within the pRst
few days from any of the lake
ports.
The third gness Is that th*
body was pitched into Che
■water from the pier near
Greenleaf aronue, Eranston.
Marks on the woman's Ang-
ers show that rfhe mmt have
worn several rings but a short
ti mo before erhe was killed and
the fact, that iney are missing
strengthens the police theory
that robbery wa tlie motive ol
the murder.
There is considerable inter-
est in connection with tihe case
because of the evident promi-
nence of the dead woman.
FLAG MUST STAT UP
unknown negro.
and there is expectation every mo-1 The Bijou theatre has been turned A dozen of the are In ho
ment of a race riot. j into a hospital and wounded negroes ■ pltals for various injurlt
execute the plans for a Cuban «*afn | Salvage company biiri
paign of great magnitude. Rush orders Loss, $150,000; partially
have been Issued to the purchasing insurance.
tiff leers of the army stationed in the I *—
western cities to buy in the marker or
l v advertisement immense quantities
or food supplies, tropical clothing,
liorses, mules, tenting, etc.
It Is understood that supplies are
being collected at i<ew York for ship-
ment. Brig. General Funston left this
afternoon for Havana for Tampa. He
will sail Sunday night, it is said Din-
ing his two days' stop here he was in
almost hourly communication with the
•high officials of the general staff. He
most mln-
1 through his pen.
Ono page contains a bit of passion
ate verse. Another pays tribute to his
love for a beautiful woman. A third
tells how, with a snap of his lingers
ho tilled his purse with the gold of
the provident.
Big Fire in Buffalo. |n one place he outlines the plan
Buffalo, Sept. 21'. 'P.he frame struc-ifor the creation of the Milwaukee Co-
lore occupied partly by the Keystone operative store, the mercantile es-
I Warehouse company and the Russell tabllshment, which, by its heavy losses
institute will continue until next j
Thursday and is expected to result in
a great advance in the methods ot
treating cancer.
tonight, finally proved Stensland's ruin.
ENGLISH FEEL
HUMILIATION
BECAUSE OF THE RECENT RAIL
WAY WRECKS IN THAT
COUNTRY.
1 unanimously adopted resolutions call-
ing upon Wood county representatives
i ) vote against Senator Bailey. At
Cameron this afternoon a similar mass
<■•> + + + + + + ** + + ♦♦♦♦ + *
PITTSBURG CLAIMS SUPREMACY.
As Seat of Iron and Steel Industry of
World.
London, Sept. 22.—A curious con-
troversy has been started here re-
• ii ding the predominance of Pittsburg
as the seat of the iron and steel in-
dustry in the world. A well known
scientific writer has maintained that
Pittsburg will retain her predomi-
nance on account of the proximity of
her fuel supply. Now another an-
thoritv declares that Pittsburg is
bound' to he superseded by Chicago
and buffalo. He points out that the
Pennsylvania city has to haul its ore
l.r.ou miles and its lime stone 250
miles. On the other hand, Chicago
hauls its fuel 500 miles, its ore 700
and its limestone 200.
In the race for supremacy in the
production of pig iron and steel," In
his conclusion. • Pittsburg Is bound
to be beaten b;
for the sitnpl
Wherever It Is Hoisted, Is His Optnlsn
—Indiana Senator Delivers Address
Before an Immense Audience hi
Chicago-—Talks of Advantage of
Government Regulation.
Chicago, Sept. 12.—Senator AlBfft
T. Bevorldge, of Indiana, opens*! the
republican oongresslonal campaign la
the middle west with a enoech at a
ma«B meeting in the auditorium to.
night. Five thousand persona listened
and applauded.
The advantages of government regiu
lation over government ownership o#
public utilities snd the Cutxan ques-
tion were the main topics of the ad-
dress.
The Senator's Speech.
Senator Beveridge spoke ln part as
follows:
"The people's government should do
no business that the people can do
better; the ;people's government
should own no business that the peo-
ple can better own.
"But the people's government
should control and regulate Industries
owned by some of the people that are
so great as to affect the welfare of
all.
"The people, through their govern-
ment, should not permit some to prac-
tice business methods unjust to all.
But the government should not own
any Industry which private enterprise
can efficiently manage and whoso
abuses government regulation can pre-
vent.
"Government ownership of nation
wide business is the European theory
of industry. Government regulation
of nation-wide business Is the Ameri-
can theory. I am for the American
theory against the European theory.
Ijet Europe copy America, not Amer-
ica copy Europe. Government control
of railways, but not government own-
ership of railways.
"The day was when individuals
could do the business of communities.
Big Combines Answer Needs.
"Now nothing but big combinations
of capital answer the needs of the
masses. Because one man can uo
longer deal with another but vast cor-
porations with millions of men, the#e
corporations become public servants,
Every manager or every industry
which touches all the people is n
longer an individual dealing with an-
other; he is a statesman of affair®
dealing with a nation. He is a trustee
management of a business for the pe^
pies welfares as well as his own.
"Great organizations came because
they were necessary; because thef
are necessary on principle thoy ar%
good. It is that they shall be a* goo«
in practice as ln theory that govern^
ment control comes Into plaj^go<*
ernment regulation, but not govern*
ment destruction; government regun*
tion, hut not government ownecjMg
unless government regulation fall!*,
Government regulation will nearer
felt by the managers of great enter-
prises who conduct business as
trustees of the people, Just as arlrnlnal
laws are not. felt by the citizen Who
f'hicago ami Buffalo attends to his duties. Just as old
m that there Is less I1U ihods of private business would be
' m
eting
?d riot
W{|
Id up
in
friends
miuorit
W'M 1
resu
eelng that t
refusing to allow h vol
luHon calling for Balle
from the 1'nited States
Will be Fight to Finish.
Ba ile
Strike May be Ended.
Winnipeg, Man . Sept. 22. -A com-
mittee of the striking building trad
ers met the builders today but arbi
THK NATIONAL I'KIPK
Of the Briton in the Safety of
Railroads Receives berious
Setback.
covered by "it is perfectly ridiculous." he
writes ln *>no place, "to give yourself
- over to one person wholly."
Stensland did not. He was* a man
of many love affairs. Several pages
of the diary are given to the addresses
of women whom he speaks of on
nation between the plumbers and other pages in terms of the most, glow
their masters would not be discussed iug.
by the employers and the delegates His notes reveal his enormous ex- t)i.
were practically Informed thai all penses for the women who held him London, sept n 1
trades will have to go 10 work 1m captive at various times during his nevertheless a fact that the averag
mediately. ti long career in Chicago. Englishman prides himself more upon
The building exchaie. ;R no ,4001 Cashier Henry Herlnn figures j,js railway: 'in on aline t any other!
edy to offer the men, ;VAjfpr ,,Ases largely. The diary furnishes
The anti
formidably
Halley arrh
purpose of
II 111 pi
gn
making
of th<
Leaders of the Halley opposition are
seeking to bring out ex-l nited States
Senator Horace < nilton. whom Bailey
once defeated, or Hon. H. M. Crane,
of Dallas, against him. An organized
; effort will be made to prevent his
confirmation
by the next
as t'niterl StaU
legislature.
ena
•d fo
have
i- now cognizant with tli .
nt< details of the plan of campaign closing down all work fo ^e season through which the pone
which had been carefully perfected by leaving the men to get woiV in some love letters written to him by
general staff several months ago. other town. The announcement has different women and received in most
i consternation in thtj ranks of cases at a saloon near the bank.
ilroad eompanle
id pre- $14
I national p<
small that th<
Prepare for Intervention
General Duval and General Barry I the union.
i
4
Revolution to Confront
The Mexican Government
Says a Special Despatch
found :
iarly intimate ass
especially strong a
great main routes
out understanding
Amercian could si
how the Salisbury
• pt. 2.—A Spanish j federal guards. The revolutionises are
Social, this after 10,000 strong. The states of Vera Vru/.
xtra containing the | Tabasco and Chlahas will joint the
TA Paso. Texas,
paper, the Reform
noon prints
following:
"Cooatfcacoalslcs, Sept. 22.—The peo-
ple of Menatltlan, San Juan, Exqullma
and San Geronimo have declared
against the Mexican government and
Hiay.. iuoy have been Joined by the
revolutionist.
Cooatzacoateics is a city on th
several hundred miles from Sduth
Vera Cruz. The editor, Lauro Agullrre
of the Reforma Social says th
sage was received by cipher.
Former Teller Walter Frantzen
I made another confession today which
' the police say makes the ease against
! Stensland complete. He denied hav-
' ing himself embezzled any <>f the
: bank's funds but he gathered up the
| threads of the case in such a way thai
| the prosecution regards its case as un-
assailable.
' "Frantzen's stories prove that the
nest of crookedness and forgery was
even more amazing than w. 1 hough
said Assistant State's Attorney Bar-
bour, after the interview. "It was
j matter of common knowledge to
! Frantzen and his associates that crook 'he ainazii ••
odness would go unpunished. As ear>y sleeping pa: n
( as 1901 everyone hail his hands in this most p,,"ll
the bank's coffers.'' the proud boas
Theodore Stensland. the bankei muds are tie-
son, was given an "Immunity bath mcomp;irai-iv 1
by the grand Jury today. It does not to American mi1
rows up between
railways a peeul
•elation which Is
regards the tw<
) the north. With
this feeling an
arcely appreciate
ccident hurt Eng
justified,
to have
hlc
affa
lish pride and how deep was 'he
pathy tor the American victims
The recollection of Salisbury
ym-
been no vs
t If, as si
| suddenly I
symptoms
only foil
ioj]
>r safety whether they
practical or not.
Hon hardly appears to
the latest acident see
en one of ihose Inexpli
to which there could hi
rnlng.
le suppose, the engin
came, without any prevh
a raving lunatic, he v
vlng the latest statist
on mileage per ton of pig Iron, and .|tterly inadequate in the new condfe
1 ,11•. ;i these ton miles for the, tion KO the old principle of arbitrary
,.l . iii named are mostly by private management is utt«rty iaap.
He mairitaVis that If the p||Cable to the new methods.
nlards could only wake up to the Railway Rate Bill.
i hi I i t ics of hi rich supply of Iron railway rate law passed by the
.■old reap a price's ransom by 1m- |irf,sent congress may not be very
for two ions of ore one ton of effective at the beginning; and that
ti ml Hoi ni* oine work |g nol important, for it would be ef-
fective in the end The important
thing is that for the first time In our
history the railway rate law puts into
practical operation the principle of
government control of railways. Why
talk of govornment ownership when
government regulation has only be-
mln? American theories have suiter!
\merlcan condition* in the past. Let
t the m trust American theories in the fUc
inre Let us Americans go on build-
ing our own free institutions 011 our
own models and teach mankind that
1 n,i ] , . 1 emulated liberty is not only best
;.OVernment but best for business
. and best for life.
'Government ownership violates
the \merlcan principle that, govern-
in, nt enterprises ought not to own
cial)— aI1d maua n what individual enter,
after prisc can own and manage.
Mi S3 Hill to Marry
lis, Tenn., Sept 22—An-1
ent i made here of the en
1 of Miss Gertrude Hill,
of James J. Hill, president
Northern Pacific railroad, to.
Gavin °f Memphis. The date
weddina is no' vet fixed, but
** lie celebrated just be
Chris
cathed
ollc cathedral or St. Paul.
Big Fire at Fort Smith.
Whin
handl
find walnut lunik
h. burned tonight
Indict 101 For Introducing.
Tulsa, I
The grand
bills. Mos
for in trod u
adjourned
$sion and
t of the
stur
I 101
indicted j
ontinued on
Page Three.)
<i which show that twenty engine
firemen
thus
afflict e
li. ;
GoVernorofRiga Vi oVince
Is the Object of Terrorist
Outbreai^;'Bomb is ThroWn
the 8c
Thursd
sink Into Insignlficar
the
rtune
ha vp
hing
In
ain
chin
Rig
Iden den ti
im s at G
that
est in
chub,
joct c
but
jury
•|si> Britons hint that if statistics were
ngs available in America it would be found
1 pared with that sudden acute insanity reaches an
met by the even higher per rentage among Amer-
untham. In lean than English locomotive hands.
passing <>l However thai may b°, the terror in j
land's rail spired by the Idea of having a ravlnu A hot
world and lunatic at the throttle has taken firm as he \
:ir in Ibis respect id of people not usually nervous, with hi
\ trcmend ms 0111 I and it will be months before the ma-i The
itly in f
aped
The
un
the hands of the per pet
ilch gave them a
treet and the bt
•n Genral Solohub
ront of the house,
of the would-be «
however, and the
isassins
geueral
Joed.
, thro
#ovei nor,' as well as the members ot
his staff accompanying htm escaped
uninjured.
Many houses in the vlciulty were
stationed in a badly damaged.
at the n
ugh the
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Jenkins, J. E. The Oklahoma Post. (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 105, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 23, 1906, newspaper, September 23, 1906; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc140400/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.