SUGAR BILL GIVES SHOOK 10 CHIEFS) IS AN INCOME TAX Some of the Insurgents Expect ed to Vote for Measure, Which Was Adopted in Majority Caucus. Washington, March 4.—House ana fiengte leaders of all shades of political belief gave themselves over today to a discussion of the sensational action of the House democratic caucus last night indorsing what is, in effect, an income tax on all net incomes, including sal aries above $5,000 a year. That the House will pass the measure by a party vote within the next 10 days or two weeks, was taken for granted. Discussion, therefore, turned largely on the reception the bill would get In the Senate. Its fate there seems doubtful. The plans of the House leaders had not boon wholly disclosed loday, but it was apparent that the hill to extend the excise tax law now relating to corpora tions so as to include co-partnerships and individuals, was to bn urged upon the Hon.1-'- ahead of the bill to put sugar on the free list. The latter bill will of course share in the debate of the so called income tax, for it was t make up the deficit of more than $50,000,000 to be lost in customs revenue on sugar, that the new taxing measure was de vised. The democratic leaders want to. in- sure that the deficit will be pro vided for before the duty is removed. Jolt for Republicans. The new plan of the democrats took their republican: colleagues entirely by surprise. Many of them had not re covers] ... today to ho willing to talk for publication. Everybody agreed that the debates in the House and Senate on so radical a change in the method of raising government rev enues would be the stormiest of recent years. The constitutionality of the new plan, it was.,«:iid, would be attacked by some representatives and senators, although the democratic leaders in the House claim the measure has been so drawn as to comply with the decision of the United States supreme court, upholding the corporation tax law. That decision, it was pointed out, held that tlie cor poration tax was not a tax on a fran chise, but on the privilege of doing business. Tlie new bill holds that working for a salary Is Just as much a manner of doing business as investing money in an enterprise Smoot Is Hostile. In the Senate, it is said that in all probability party alignments will be broken, although party leaders make no such concession publicly. Senator Smoot, of Utah, a member of the Sen ate finance committee, which will deal with the bill, declared there was no possibility of the measure passing the Senate. "1 do not believe,” he said, “that any republican senator, regular or insur gent, or that many democrats will stand for this measure that would de stroy a great Industry. The income tax proposition Is absolutely unconsti tutional. To call it an excise tax in stead of an income tax that has al ready been declared unconstitutional is simply quibbling on words. It is an income tax. pure and simple.” Senator Kern, of Indiana, who was democratic candidate for vice president in tlie last national campaign, said tlie measure was a good one. Views of Democrats. "1 am and always have been in favor of ail income tax,” he said. “I also am in favor of free sugar.” "The .measure is eminently wise and ought to pass,” said Senator Martin, of Virginia, democratic leader in the Sen ate. There is no doubt in my mind as to its constitutionality. Senator Poindexter, of Washington, progerssive republican, said: "I am very much in favor of an in come tax. I have been favoring it for years.” Senator McCumber. of North Dako ta. a member of the Senate finance committee, expressed doubt if any change would be made in the existing law. “Personally,” he added, "I am In clined to think that congress has the power to levy such a tax.” Senator Bacon, of Georgia, who did not attempt to speak for his party, as he had no opportunity to talk with any senators regarding the bill, predicted that if the bill passed the House, it would find "sufficient support In the Senate.” HOME OF PASTOR IS BURNED IN THE NIGHT Event Comes as Sequel to His Indictment By Grand Jury On Perjury Charge. Fort Worth, Tex., March 4.—A few hours after Rev. J. Frank Morris, pas tor of the First Baptist church had been indicted on the charge of per jury, his home burned down last night. It come a mysterious sequel to an .‘l'*1 equally mysterious chain of events in , which the saloon fighting minister has figured. The most startling development came last night, when, accused of perjury, Norris was charged with having writ ten letters to himself in which he was threatened with death if he did not leave town. Norris first attracted attention here by campaigns for enforcement of pro hibition laws. Then Norris declared an attempt had been made to assassinate him This was followed by the des truction of the First Baptist church by fire. Norris reported a second attempt had been made on his life after this, and be traveled with a body guard. Then he exhibited the warning letters which last night the grand jury de clared Norris wrote to himself. Norris’ charges attracted a great deal of at tention to his chu’v’h work. BROWN WINS BOUT. Waterloo, la., March 4.—In the fast est wrestling bout of the season, Carl Brown, of Waterloo, welterweight champion of the middle west, defeated “Bull'’ McCleary, of Muscatine, in two straight falls here last night. The first fall was won in 14 minutes, 8 seconds and the second in 7 minutes, 117 seconds. GOLD FOR SOUTH AMERICA. London, March 4.—Bullion amount ing to 50,000 pounds was taken into the Bank of England today and 100,000 pounds was withdrawn for .shipment to South America. WILD OUTBREAKS IN CHINA AGAIN Washington, Tv'arch 4.—A strong detachment of United States troops has been ordered to proceed to Poking from i ien Tsin immediately, according to a dis patch received from that city to day. N Peking, China, March 4.—A fierce rc crudance of disorder occurred today when a detachment of artillery, headed by a band, marched to the palace of Duke Kuel Hsiang, father of the em press dowager, and shelled down the gate. They looted a large amount of property ar-d burned a portion of the palace. The Peking ministers here, after a conference, have decided to nnng into Peking all the available, foreign troops stationed in adjacent ports of China. A force of 1.000 troops of various nation alities will arrive here .tomorrow. Many missionaries have been slaughtered by the mutineers in Pao Ting Fu, according to a report received here today. It is thought probable, however, in well informed circles that only one or two have been killed. It is belie ved that they arc Homan Cath olics. Although last night parties of sold iers belonging to the army commanded by Chang Huai Chih were engaged themselves in looting, today they fought the looters in the outs1 irts of the city. Prisoners they took were summarily decapitated and many headless bodies are lying in the streets in various parts of tin* city. In the distant part of the west city, considerable trouble oc curred Whole streets of shops were looted and many houses were set on fire. STRIKE VERY SERIOUS j IN ffiES OF BRITAtN .... Industries of Many Kinds Crip- j pled By Lack of Usual Fuel Supply. -- London, March 4.—The great ports j of the united kingdom, particularly ! those situated in Wales, rrorn which : coal Is shipped to every part of the world, and the centers of the Iron and steel industries have naiuraly been the first to feel the effects of the strike 1 ot more than 2,000,u00 coal miners in i England, Scotland and Wales. Many iron works in various districts were closed today and at Swansea and j elsewhere the docks have come praetic- ! ally to a standstill. No vessels are ar- 1 riving and the dockers and workmen j employed in the local industries have : been thrown out of work. G^eat crowds of these men gathered in the streets discussing the dispute. Thus far there have been no disturb ances anywhere. In South Wales, how ever. the mine owners are preparing for emergencies. They have had walls built around the mines and have laid In j great stores of provisions in anticipa- : tier of a long siege. The railroad and street car services ! in many cities have been still further I curtailed today. Only two small non- ! union mines in the entire country are j still at work One of these is in North Wales ana the other near Berwick, on I the Scotish border. The tin plate works of Wales aro ' closing down rapidly owing to lack of coal. Six hundred mills will be Idle within a few days and 40.000 men who are employed wiU be thrown out of work. STRIKE IS GOING ON IN COTTON FACTORIES Advance in Wages Fails to End trouble in Lawrence Tex tile Mills. - ^ — ■■ Lawrence, Mass., March 4.—Despite yesterday’s announcement of increased wages in ail but two of the textile mills, the strike of the operatives of ficially was no nearer settlement today than before the news of the Increase was received. The attitude of the strike leaders and many of the mem bers of the organized labor bodies con tinued strongly in support of the original demands which greatly ex ceeded the offer made by the mill owners. The meeting of the general strike committee of the Industrial Workers of the World today had before it the mat ter of deciding on another conference between the subcommittee of the gen eral strike committee, the officers of the American Woolen company and the legislative committee on conciliation. No children were sent from this city to Philadelphia today, the strikers’ committee having decided to postpone the departure because the eases of 14 children who were taken Into custody last Saturday are still awaiting action by the court. MILITANT WOMEN TO DO TIME IN PRISON Mrs. Pankhurst and Her Two Associates Are Sentenced to Serve 60 Days. London. March 4.—Mrs. Emeline Pankhurst. Mrs. Tukes and Mrs. Mar shall, tht$ three leaders of last evening's window Smashing campaign by which the suffragets succeeded in terroriz ing the London tradesman, were today . sentenced each to two months' im prisonment. They were the first three of the 24 women who were arrested In the course of the street demonstrations and who are to be arraigned at the Row Street police court chiefly on charges of caus ing wilful damage to stores In Bond street, Piccadilly, Regent street, Ox I ford street, the Haymarket and the Styand, as well as other busy shopping streets. The attorney for the prosecution an nounced in court today that the total damage done by the suu'ragetes In their stone throwing manifestations was es timated dt $25,000 and on behalf of the government he stated that the time had now arrived when the consideration which had been hitherto shown in con nection with suffraget raids could no longer be allowed. On the delivery of the sentence by the court, Mrs. Pankhurst declared that she Intended to go fani.fr when she came out of prison and that her suffragets were prepared to go to the fullest, limit, to show the government that women wen going to secure tha vote. !WOMAN IN TEARS AS LOVER BEARS PLOT TO MURDER Witness Againsi Wife Declares : He Made Confession to Save His Neck From the Gallows. Oklahoma. City, Oka., March 4.— Turning state’s evidence against his fellow defendants charged with the murder of Thomas J. Gentry and ad mitting that he did so to protect him- ! soX under promises made to him by the j county attorney's office, J. K. Mackey is \ the star witness for the state in the trial of Mrs. Alverta Gentry now being con ducted by Judge Huston in the district court. Without a quiver and in a voice that snarled with inhuman hatred for Mrs. Gentry, his. former sweetheart, who is now on trial for her life, Mackey ad mitted that he knew of tne plot to murder Gentry, that an attempt had been made to buy poison to commit the deed and that he knew that the wom an's infatuation for him was at the bottom of tlie plot. He turned upon those accused with him, laid the actual commission of the deed at the door of Maurice Weightman, and denied that he was in the room when the shot was fir.ed. According to Mackey, Mrs. Gentry after the fatal shot was fired emptied contents of trunks upon the floor, took the diamond stud from the shirt of her dead husband and placed a comb from her own head in the bed. to make it appear that a woman companion of her husband's had occupied the bed the night of the killing. He testified that he saw the mur dered man sitting in a chair with the blood streaming from the crown of his head arid that the woman came to him and said: "Come: this is no place for us!" Merciless Examination. Through a merciless cross examina tion at the hands of Homan Pruh tt, he held to his story, and admitted that he was only telling what he claims to bo the true story in order to save himself. “Do you not know that this llttlo woman was more than two miles away from the .Gentry house when you slip ped up behind Thomas J. Gentry and fired the bulh t into his brain that took his life?” shouted Pruiett at one time in the cross-examination Mackey did not quail under the shot. He was leaning forward in the witness chair and replied In loud voice: “No, I do not.” "Tou say that you knew that Mrs. Gentry and Maurice Weightman had threatened the ' re of Thomas Gentry,” again asked Pruhtt. “Why did you not then warn him, or notify the officers that this man’s life was in danger?" "I did not consider it any of my busi ness,” was the answer. Promise Of Protection. Mackey said that he has been prom ised protection by Assistant County At torney Zwiek if lie should tell all he knows and that he was Influenced by that inducement alone In taking the stand. He admitted that he made a written confession to the countv at torney’s office some time ago and that it, too, was made under a promise of proteetiort. He said that he loved Alverta Gentry with a love that is deeper than the world can understand, that he-regarded her as the woman of his affections. "Is It not a fact that you went to Gentry's house previous to the murder, disguised as a burglar, to kill him; that his wife wrenched the pistol from your hand, shoved you out of the door, and did you not later pawn the pistol off under the name of Jack Mason?” asked Pruiett. Mackey Denies It. "No; that is not true. I did pawn the gistol at the Goldstein pawn shop on roadway, but it was the day before the murder and Mrs. Gentry gave it to me.” According to the testimony of Mack ey, the plot to kill Gentry had been mapped out among the three for a month before the actum killing. He claimed that he never had any inten tion of taking part in it. that Mrs. Gen try told him Gentry had struck her, and that she was going to kill him or got some one else to do so. He said that Weightman bought poison and placed it in milk, but that Gentry for some reason did not drink it and then the plot to shoot Gentry was .decided upon. The evening before the murder, he said, there was a dispute between Weightman and Mrs. Gentry as to who should fire the shot and that he sug gested they draw straws. He claimed that Mrs. Gentry prepared the straws and he held them. In the draw Weight man drew the straw which meant that his was to be the hand that Hred the shot. According to Mackey's story the three then went to the Gentry home and the deed was done. He testified that the woman made eggnog and that the three of them drank Mrs. Gentry stating that it would be thought that Gentry had been entertaining friends and that one of them had killed him. He did not see the shot fired, he said, but beard the report. It was then he said that he went into the house and saw the dead man sitting in the chair with the blood streaming from the wound down over his breast, his feet crossed and his hands resting in his lap. Then he says the woman came and took him away, Weightman going with them. According to his story. Weight man later threw the automatic pistol In the sewer and they boarded a car and went to the Ferris hotel, where they spent the night. Weightman did not accompany them to the hotel, ho said, but came later and said: "You thought I would turn rabbit, didn't you?” The next morning, he said, they left the hotel and later he was arrested and taken before Chief of Police Tilgh man. theatrical”man dies. Rich Hill, Mo., March 2.—W. M. Belcher, Sor 40 years an actor and the atrical manager, well known through out Missouri, died at his home here today. robbeTcaptured in BATTLE WITH POLICE Montreal, March 4.—One of five robbers who brqke into a branch of the Royal bank early today at Montreal West, a junction of the Canadian Pa cific railroad, five miles west of the city, was killed in a running light with citizens. Residents of the neighborhood got the alarm bsfore the gang had ob tained any loot. After an exchange of shoots the other four robbers escaped, leaving the body of their companion. ’PHONE SYSTEM IS QUIETLY AT WORK Kansas City, Mo., March 4.—A hea.vy st< -fi; holder .1 ;hi' Kansas City Home T('l' nil,«in’ coin-t any, which was sold to the Telephone Sccuriti ; company, of West Virginia, says the deal meant that Kansas City and its territory now was under the control of the American Tel ephone and Telegraph company. That Is the trust organized by J. P. Morgan to take over the Bell companies ana the Western Union Telegraph cor.pany. Refusing to permit the use of hi a name, he said: "In financial, as well as telephone cir cles. it is known that the Telephone Securities company, of West Virginia, which now controls the Kansas City Home Telephone company and all the Independent exchanges and toll lines in this territory, is only a subsidiary com pany of the trust." Not a Trust Deni, He Says. Theodore Gary, the president of tha new company, who came to Kansas City from Macon, Mo., to become president of the Kansas City Home Telephone company, denied this morning that II was a trust deal, lie reiterated his as sertion of yesterday that the inden pendents outside of Kansas City ac quired the independent exchange in Kansas City so that the exchanges outside could not bo Injured by a merger of the Bell and the Home In Kansas City. Mr. Gary says, however, ho is nol averse to talking merger with the Bell on a plan that will take care of all th« independents In this territory. He says, In addition, he believes the time is coin ing when the public will demand a merger, resulting In universal servlet for the subscribers of the two compa nies. Merger Will Go On, He Says. The holder of stock In the Horn* company continued: “It’s significant that someone put up millions of dollars to finance the mer ger of all the Independent companies, It’s not reasonable to suppose that a man from Macon, Mo., furnished all that rapital. The truth Is that the Ameri can Telephone and Telegraph company financed the deal. "The merging of the two telephons services Is to go forward rapidly now. It Is not to begin in Kansas City, how ever. Kansas City will learn by a pro cess of elimination that a merger Is In evitable and eventually the subscribers to the Homo company will demand a merger. The city administration now , demands terms of merger which tha trust will not accede to. It will wait for j the demand of public sentiment to soften | some of the demands of the city. That ! is to be done by putting the subscribers to the Horne service In a pocket where they will be helpless, How It Will Force a Merger. "Here's the way It will work out: The trust will merge the services in tha cities and towns of this territory where the lines of public resistance are the least. Take, for instance, a merger of the two exchanges in Topeka. Then a business man in Topeka can talk only with a Bell subscriber In Kansas City. The same condition will obtain In other cities like St. Joseph and Joplin. “Then the Home subscriber In Kan sas City will complain and seek tn change to the Bell service In Kansas City. The Bell will say: ‘We will In stall a Bell phone for you as quickly ns possible, but we can't do it right away as we have not the equipment oi the money to buy more equipment.’ In the meantime the subscriber will have to get along with his limited Home "That will produce vexation. The trust will have the only remedy and It will delay applying it. Then will come the demand for a merger so the Home subscribers can get universal service The trust then will ask to confer with C city again on a proposition tc mt rye,'' -!-* --- • Custom House Men Try t« Guard the Great Collection Now Being .Shipped. New York, March 4.—Unusual pre cautions have been taken by too cus toms house authorities to guard the are treasures valued at many millions and imported by J. Pierpont Morgan from his European museums and gal- i leries to this city, during the transit to their final destination. Cable dis patches from London state that Mr. Morgan has placed a valuation of $20, 000,000 on the treasures, while Michael Nathan, the official assessor sent abroad by the treasury department to inspect the art objects, believes that $50,000,000 is a closer estimate. The first shipment of the art works already has been received and another is expected within a few days. Not one of the works of art is bandied by local examiners or appraisers. The cases in which they arrive are not even opened and the Invoices of lists of articles describing the shipment are ac cepted without question and passed without examination. Secretary of the Treasury MacVeagh detailed Deputy Appraiser Nathan to go abroad and represent the customs department at London. Nathan ex amines each articles packed for ship ment and notes whether or not it Is entitled to admission free of duty. An unpacking of the shipment here for customs examination might have caused an injury or destruction to some of the priceless pieces of art. REPORTERS FLOCK TO HOME OF ROOSEVELT Oyster Bay, N. Y., March 4.—The siege of Sagamore Hill began yester day, when Colonel Roosevelt made his first appearance in his home town since his declaration of willingness to accept the presidential nomination. A full fledged battalion of correspondents and telegraph operators came down from New York with the colonel, ready foi the campaign from now until the re publican national convention meets. For months the colonel has declined to be Interviewed while at Sagamore Hill, but yesterday he signalized his entrance into the campaign by lifting the embargo. He was perfectly willing to talk, but said there was not a thing > to say Just now. The impression gath ered was that he would do some plain talking before the fight ends. TAFT MEN C.HOSr»' Buffalo, N. Y„ March 4.—William H. Daniels, of Buffalo, and Kepi a. James S. Simmons, of Niagara Falls, both adherents of President Taft, were I chosen as the republican primary can didates for delegates from the Fortieth congressional district to the national convention, last evening. BLIZZARD IS FATAL. Hobart, Okla., March 4.—As a result of exposure while lost In a blizzard which swept over this section recently, James S. Haddock, aged 30, and Boylt Kennedy, aged 18, are dead here a* pneumonia. Both were freighters CHRISTIANS SLAIN BY ORIENTALS IN A RELIGIOUS UPROAR Those Who Are Caught in th» Act of Pillage Are Killed On Spot By Order of the Premier. Peking, March 2.—At 7:30 thi9 evening desultory shooting again began in the city. It is bolieved that Yuan Shi Kai has lost some of his con'.rol. None of the troops except the Manchus ere to be depended on and they evi dently care only to defend the im perial and forbidden cities. The smoldering fires in many districts of the city are this eve ning being raked over by throngs of the poor. No fresh fires have oc curred today, but there has been some further looting. San Francisco. Cal., March 2.—Bring ing the first word of the massacre oi eight persons connected with Christian missions by fanatical Chinese outlaws last October, 24 mission workers ar rived hero on the liner China from the province of Shensi In central China. The victims of the slaughter are: GEORGE AHLSTRAND, 13 years old. MRS. RICHARD BECKMAN. SELMA BECKMAN, aged 12. RUTH BECKMAN, aged 8. HULDA BERGSTROM, aged 13. OSCAR BERGSTROM, aged 10. HILDA NELSON, aged 18. GEORGE VANTNE, teacher at a mission school at Sian Fu. In recounting the outrages of the Chinese survivors dwelt on the re markable escape of Richard Beckman, who, after seeing his wife and daughter clubbed to death, waded Into a lake with his 3-year-old daughter In his arms in the darkness and escaped. Looting In Peking. Peking, China, March 1.—Throughout the day looting of stores and residences has been going on In various parts of the city and there have been several skirmishes between the loyal troops and the mutineers In the outskirts. Tho majority of the mutineers, however, had left the central districts before morning. Ten looters captured In the act of carrying off property were executed on tho spot by loyal soldiers, several regi ments of whom, are patrolling tho streets. The Incendiary Arcs which were started last night have all been extinguished or have died out. Tho loss Is estimated approximately at $15, 000,000. The number of casualties that have occurred among the civilians and tho soldiers is not known, but It Is believed the loss of life has been heavy. The outbreak was a most complete surprise, both to the government and to the foreign legations, and there Is some apprehension of a recurrence of the disorders tonight. Situation Is Quieting. London, March 1.—The situation In Poking this afternoon was much quieter according to the Exchange Telegraph company's) dispatches from Tien Twin. Burning and looting continued more or less actively, during the morning how ever. in the course of the night's riot ing or Japanese subject was wounded, but there are thus far no reports of other casualties among foreigners. The propel ty of purple of all nationalities outside tho legation quarter suffered heavy d linage at the hands of the rioters It is reported that there was trouble during the night at Fine Tal, 22 miles from Peking'. Mutinous troops, It is sail!, hi a troyed tile railway station. Mutiny Is Reported. Tien Vain, March 1.—The Chinese troops at K, r., Tal, a village 23 miles out from Peking, on t‘no Poking-Tier Tsin lailiasd mutinied shortly aftei midnight this morning. There was much heavy tiring In tile native quar ter. Tho foreign community, composed entirely of railway employes and their families, retired to the British mlll tar\ post nearby, where 150 soldiers ol the Somerset Infantry are stationed tc guard the railway line. Dispatches from Pi ning declare that the situation there today Is very es rlous. No reinforcements of foreign troops for the legation' guard are re quired at present however. By noon today It became evident that mutinous Chinese soldiers were eaus lng trouble along the l(ne of the rail road between the capital and this city The morning train which left Peking at 8:30 o’clock had not yet reached Feng Tal (22 miles), at 11:30 o’clock and an English officer with a detach ment of Somerset Infantry was sent In a light locomotive te ascertain the whereabouts of the train und If nec essary escort It on Its way. The telegraph lines toward the capi tal are badly crippled. Railway men believe Feng Tal was looted during the night. All train service toward Peking has been suspended. FUNERAL SERVICE OVER BOBY OF ROYAL DUKE Windsor, England, March 2.—Funeral services of the simplest form attended the temporary burial In the royal vaults here today of the Duke of Fife, broth erlnlaw of King George, who died Jan uary 29, at Assouan, Egypt, as the re sult of exposure when the steamer Delhi was wrecked off the Moroccan coast, December 13. King George, Queen Mary and the princess royal, widow of the Duke of Fife, and her daughters, some other members of tho royal family and a few personal friends composed the congre gation. Queen Mother Alexandra was unable to be present, owing to an at tack of Influenza. Final Interment will be In the Fife family lot, at Mar Dodge Braemar, Scotland. MAJOR BUTT ILL. Washington, March 2.—Major A. W. Butt, personal aide to President Taft was today granted leave of absence by the war department for one month and 24 days and on Saturday will sail from New York for the Mediterranean. The leave was granted on a surgeon’s cer tificate. Ho has been In poor health for several months. TAKES HONDURAN TOWN. Tegucigalpa, Honduras, March 1.— Jose Maria Villadaies, a Honduran rev olutionary belonging In Amapala, yes terday crossed the San Salvador fron tier Into Honduras with CO men and captured the border town of Arame nelna. ‘ WRECK IN SOUTH. • Anniton, Ala,, March 2.—At least one man was killed and three hurt In the Xvreck near here today of south bound passenger train No. 35, on the Southern railway. The wires! are down. . ii —a> MORSE HO^ES HIS HEALTH WILL GET BETTER IN WEEKS With His Faithful Wife, Formei Wall Street Man Is Seek ing to Rid Himself of Malady. Genoa. Italy, March 2.—“If ail goes well,” said Charles W. Morse to a correspondent, as the freed financier sat chatting with him on the deck of the Katser Auguste Victoria on the way from Vlllefranche to Genoa today —“If all goes well," he repeated. "I shall bo back In New York In three or four months, and able, I hope, to think of other tilings tnan my health." As the correspondent was conver sing with Mr, Morse, the boat passed Monte Carlo and the correspondent vouchsafed the Information that Mr. Morse's old friends, ex-Mayor Van Wyck, of New York, was stopping there, but Mr. Morse kept silent. Then he went on: “But first I want to go to Paris and get out and see what the world is like. I did Intend going to Bad Neuhelm to take the cure, but they tell me it 1» cold and disagreeable there at this season of the year, so I think It will do me more good to take a rest and the air on board this boat, where I am comfortable. Determined to Get Well. “When 1 get back my health, as I propose to do if will power and pluck count for anything,” continued Mr. Morse, "then I will put my mind to other things, but until then I shall allow myself to think of nothing else." Mr. Morse greeted the correspon dent most cordially when he came aboard, saying: "You are the first newspaper man I've seen in six months. Now that I think of It, though, there Is one ex ception. Some one saw me at At lanta, but I was so 111 that I did not know if he was a newspaper man or a sheriff," Wife Is Very Dubious. Mr. Morse was seated beside his wife on the deck, enjoying the beau tiful mountainous panorama of the Mediterranean coast line Mrs. Morse, though, gave a doubtful wel come to the approaching correspon dent, saying: "I knew you were n siewspnper man and told my iujsbamr so as soon as I saw you. It comes lntitutlvely to mo now. I thought that away off here we might be free from all this trying publicity, but it seems we are doomed. Here Mr. Morse spoke up and Said: “But, dearie, allow enterprise to have its own reward; It's all right.” Mrs. Morse smiled and answered: “Well, I'll try not to be disagreeable, hut If you hail gone through what we have you would not -blame me for having such feeling that it requires an effort for me to be pleasant to the press." The correspondent asked permission to take a photograph of Mr. and Mrs. Morse as they sat on the deck. “Not With me in it," said Mrs. Morse, laughingly. "1 have had too much experience with the persistence of photographer:!, and, onythow. I never know if the picture la to bo good of me or not. and they have published such awful things labeled with my name.” Have Their Pictureo Taken. But Mr. Morse was much amused and said persuasivly to bis wife: “Wlmt does it matter? Come on, be game." After posing the couple, the cnrie apondent asked them to "look pleas ant." "That Is the easiest thing you could ask us to do,” said Mrs. Morse, "for two happier mortals than we are could not be imagined." So the "snap” was made. To look at Mr. Morse no one would think that his health was precarious, but when he speaks his voice betrays weakness and he Is unable to get aoout without assistance, which always comes from his wife, who waits upon him every moment of the day. Comes From Missouri. Commenting on the devotion of Ills wife, the correspondent asked Mrs. Morse from where such women as she comes, and when Mrs. Morse said, "I come from Mlsosurl,” and the corre spondent smiled, Mrs. Morso said: “What always puzzled me until my husband told me the joke and why people should laugh when I told them that 1 came from Missouri. Now 1 understand, so I do not blame you." Mr. Morse, speaking of the condi tion of his health, said: "For three days after coming or hoard I was unable to leave my cabin, but this wonderful air and the free dom from worry are glvin* one new strength daily, and already Y {cel like a different man. I really have taken hope that I can pull myself around all right. My heart gives me much trouble, and under the doctor's orders I am taking four Injections of strych nine daily. It Is not pleasant to wake up at night and feel that part of you has gone, and not know If you are going to be able to keep the other part going." REDUCTION OF TELEPHONE RATES IS ENJOINED Kansas City, Mo., March 2.—The * public utilities commission of St. Jos eph, Mo., is enjoined by the federal court here today to prevent the en forcement of a reduction of rates of the Bell Telephone company of that city ordered by the commission to taka place February 1. Judges Walter B. Sanborn, A. S. Van Valkenburg, and John C. Pollock sat in the hearing which was an appeal by tho telephone company for a tempor ary injunction to take the place of a temporary restraining order in force since February 1. WRIT IS DENIED. Jefferson City, Mo., March 1.—The Missouri supreme court today denied the writ of ouster, asked by the state against the Missouri Pacific. Iron Mountain and Wabash railroads, the Pacific Express company and the American Refrigerator Transit com pany. STATISTICIAN RECALLED. Chicago, March 2.—William Fauckes. statistician for Sulzberger & Sons com . pany, was recalled to tho stand in tho I packers trial today and was questioned I regarding the allowances made for by products in figuring the test cost of dressed beef. lie said the test cost of Sulzberger & Sons company was lower than the flg i ures used by the defendants because | his company made full allowance for all I by-products at the current market price. This method necessitated fre : quent ehanges in the dlf'.lrent allow ances for by-products, the w ttness suid.