-W9ilflM&n&rrT frsrr vT"- Commoner. JANTJAHY 27, 1905 i '.iiijiwintywgtwpWwiiiM)WWF'q Mf& . i i a rk i i i . " " ' iMH;tff A Republican House Should Not Impeach A Republican Judge Under dato of Washington, Jan. 17, a correspondent for the New York "Vyorld says: The introduction of politics into the impeachment proceedings against Judge Swayne, of Florida, today caused a severe attack to bo made on Judge Don A. Pardee, of the Federal Court of Appeals, by Representative Clark, of New York. Gen. Grosvenor, of Ohio, in defending Judge Swayne read a letter he had re ceived from Judge Pardee in which he exonerated Judge SNvayne and said a Republican House should not impeach a, republican judge. The letter was dated New Orleans, March 24, 1904. Judge Pardee expressed surprise that the house committee on the judiciary had voted, "six democrats and two re publicans,' to present articles of im peachment against Judge Swayne. He reviews te circumstances of Judge Swayne's appointment and his conflict with democrats of his district, and con cludes: "I have written this long letter be cause I really feel that without the po litical prejudices against Judge Swayne there would be no impeachment, and that in justice to a Southern judge who was a republican before he wa3 ap, pointed, and who was appointed be cause he was a republican, as there are no republican congressmen from the south, some of the northern breth ren ought to look carefully into the case and be sure that an impeachment ought to b'e voted before putting a judge to the disgrace of an impeach ment, consequent expense, trial , and tribulation to himself and amity re sulting therefrom." Mr. Cockran first took issue with the majority report of the committee on the expense account charge. He said: "It is hardly necessary to inquire whether he eats corned beef and cab bage at 50 cents a plate or leg of lamb at 60. How is the statute to be in terpreted? 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When I state that, I describe a specta clo which ought to make us pause; which indicates in a marked degree a decay of our constitutional system. "Sir, suppose when the case of Sena tor Burton was pending before the supreme court of tho United States, that the senate had passed a resolution declaring that Senator Burton was a model ot virtue and senatorial courtesy and that his prosecution was an act of some government department. Would not a thrill of horror have run through tho entire country? Yet how would such action by the senate dif fer from this action of this judge at tempting to control this, the grand in quest of the nation, in dealing with a member of that judiciary? I do not call attention to the character of tho letter but to the character of the trans action itself. "How can this judge, Pardee, ever again ask a man arraigned at the bar, what word he has to say why sentence for an offens- against the revenue laws shall not be pronounced upon him? Could not a criminal quote this language of Jude Pardee and say that the law imposing revenue duties was immoral and should not be enforced? Why can he not say to Judge Pardee, 'You must not hold me to a rabid com pliance with a law which I think is re strictive of human lioerty. Is this judge fit to administer justice again, now that he himself has discredited prompt and quick obedience to the law by a judge who is 3Worn to administer it? "And we have another judge," con tinued Mr. Cockran, "with superior claim to enlighten our conscience, quoted by the gentleman from Ohio as a man from before whom we should all bend, coming in here, and, sir, say it with little shore of horror, that he comes in here with perjured lips and asks us to share his perjury and his disloyalty. "A republican legislature should not impeach a republican! What a tribute he pays to you gentlemen 'on the other side!' Are we to be diverted from a conscientious discharge of our duty by a man who, clothed in the ermine of u judge, turns that robe into the costume of a harlequin, and, dancing across this floor, invites us to perjure our souls and violate the Constitution?" Mr. Lamar, of Florida, repelled tho c.arge contained in the Pardee letter that the state of Florida had a political grievance against Judge Swayne. How ever, he said, he believed Judge Pardee to be honest ana said 1 3 stood high in Louisiana and Florida. An agreement was reached to vote on the S"wayne impeachment articles tomorrow at 3:30-o'clock. A Deal In "Wasti Stock" New York, January- 7. Although the next meeting before United States Commissiorcr Alexander in tho bank ruptcy proceedings against Munroo & Munroo will not be held until 11 o'clock on Tuesday morning, much will prob ably be done between now and' then to ascertain to what extent tho manage ment 'of the National City bank was responsible for the bank's alloged ac tion in leLding tho brokers $00,000 a day for eight days beforo tho Munroo collapse, with, .t is charged, no other security than the unindorsed demand notes of the insolvent firm, a firm that started in but a short while ago with only ?1,G00 capital. As mattera now stand, Frcs.dent James Stillman of the National City bank is reported to have tried to minimize the practice of lend ing upon such "security" by shifting tho responsibility upon Archibald G. Loomis, second vice president. Loomis, it is reported, was chairman of the executive committee of the syn dicate got up by Munroo & Munroo to inflate the price of Montreal & Boston consolidated copper stock from 50 cents to $3.50. Tho inflation, it is said in -ill street, was done by a gigantic system of "washed sal s," which means that the same house puts out large buying and selling orders among half a dozen brokers, who do a phenomenal business arao themselves, without letting any outsider dispose of any stock at the inflated prices. As Second Vice President Loomis' son was an officer of tho Montreal and Boston copper company, the elder Loomis may, so it is said, havo con sidered himself perfectly safe in let ting Munroe have a $00,000 National City bank check each morning, with tho understanding that it should be canceled each afternoon beforo the close of l.io bank. When asked recent ly whether he intended to resign, Loomis said: . "Why should I resign? They say we lent $00,000 a day for eight days with out security. How do they know what security we had? The bank did not lose a cent." Vice President G. S. Whitson con sented today to do whatever talking there wa3 to be done in Mr. Stillman's absence. "Do you regard Loomis' loans of $G0, 000 a day to Munroe & Munroe with out adequate security as a species of over-certification ?" "No, not over-certification. This bank never over-certifies for anybody." "Will you say positively whether tho bank had adequate security when it loaned Munroe & Munroe $G0,000 a day for eight days before their failure?" "I do not care to discus3 the nature of the security, but this bank did not lose anything by tho loans." "Do you know whether tho federal authorities are going to investigate those transactions?" "I have not heard that they were go ing to do so." "Will there be an official statement from the bank todfy?" "If Mr. Stillman comes down and we have a change of heart there may be a statement later in the day, but it is a short day and Mr. Stillman may not be down." Exactly what security, if any, will be determined next week when S'amuel Untermeyer, counsel for the receiver of Munroe Munroe, will put Mr. Loomis on. the witness stand and ask him all about those checks. Tho examination of Second Vice President Loomis of the National City bank upon the methods in vogue in the Rockefeller institution, will bo watched with Interest by the federal bank authorities, who, it is said, have already begun to prick up their ears and become interested in the question of issuing checks without gilt edged security. Wall street is much Interested just now in the future of Archibald C. Loomis. He ha3 said since the Mun roe trouble was made public that ho has no intention of resigning. But Wall street thinks he -may change his mind. 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It did this for legions ol others, among them such well-known persons as Mrs. Martha (Joker, 'lyl r, Tex.; G.O.Kector, Marshall, N. C; Mrs. Murk Dcvan, Nounk, Conn.: Archibald Hltchlc, Mt. Forest, Ont., Can.; I'll. J. Brown, Kelispell, Mont., and It will surely do It for you. Write to the Turnock Medical Co., UZ07 Bush Temple, Chicago, 111., and since every free treatment is accompanied byaC8-page illustrated book go Ing luliy into all thedetulls, It behooves you to send your name and address promptly tor these lree ollcrlngs. Do so today sure, for you cannot Justly suy you are Incurable until you have tried this really remarkable treatment, and as neither money nor even stampsore asked (or, you should certainly muke a lree test of it ut once. to he lenient. He says all hank officers arc liable to make mistakes. There is war in tho Standard Oil camp because of the revelations in tho bankruptcy case against the brokerage Arm of Murroe & Munroe, which show that Loomis was the head of the syn dicate which employed the Munroes to "wash" 7,000,000 shares of Montreal and Boston copper stock. The person from whom the report of this state of affairs came also de clared today that John D. Rockefeller felt keenly th- position that the Na tional City bank had been placed in by Loomis, and that when a meeting of the directors takes place next week he would insist upon a reorganization of forces. The informant said that Mr. Rocke feller was bent upon having the resig nation of Mr. Loomis immediately, but that H. H. Rogers and his people had allied them-elvea against tho pursuit of such a policy on the ground that if Loomis' connection with the National City bank vrerp to be severed at this time it would -e a tacit admission that all tho charges made against the vice president with relation to his leader ship of tho Montreal and Boston, '"washing" syndicate were true. Spe 'cial to St Loui3 Globe-Democrat -A mk&N ItofrlN 'yiriih''ViHiin iAt.fa jfr-tjCjfci trirtMi imiti'-1 .&ijmit- --. Kt-M -juti -- I ...Ajfldfr.i m !' U.bv. t-it M t tiBwx. -A u . 4Lo.w -- . U &