1 V" 1 WW ii ii ii in i A WEEKLY JOURNAL DEVOTED TO POLITICS AGRICULTURE AND HOME LIFE Vol. 19. No. 939. Lincoln, Nebraska, June 7, 1906 Subscription $1.00 SENATOR GORMAN DEAD Maryland Statesman Seized With ' Heart Attack and Expires in Five Minutes. Washington, June 4. Arthur Pue Gorman, United States senator rom Maryland, died suddenly at hi3 resi dence in this city at 9:05 this morn ing. While Senator Gorman had been ill for many .months, he had shown some . improvement lately. Heart trouble was the immediate cause of death. .... Up to the moment of death Senator Gorman was conscious. His condition during the last week hai' improved so touch yesterday the family had hopes of shortly taking him to the country. He partook of some nourishment af 8 o'clock this morning, but at 9 o'clock he was seized with a heart attack and died in five minutes. . Family at Bedside - At the bedside were Mrs. Gorman, Miss Ada Gorman, the senator's eldest daughter, and the nurse. When the attack came physicians were sent for, but the senator was dead before they arrived. -' , ? , . Senator Gorman leaves a widow and six children, as follows: Miss Ada Gorman, Mrs.' Wilton J. Lambert, Mrs. R. A. Johnson Mrs. R. W.- Hill of this city, Mrs. Stephen Gambrill of Lon don, England, who arrived here a week ago, and Arthur Pue Gorman, Jr., of Laurel, Md., a member of the Maryland assembly. CONGRESSMAN SUICIDES Congressman Robert Adams of Penn sylvania Commits Suicide . Washington, D C Congressman 'Adams, who committed suicide, wrote the following letter to Speaker Can non: "Washington, D. C, May 31, 1906. Hon. J. G. Cannon. My Dear Mr. Speaker: The fact that my profes sional obligations exceed my resources is my only excuse for abandoning the responsible position I occupy in the house. I am willing to be buried at its ; expense, but, I ask that, no com mittee be appointed or memorial ser vices held, as I have never been in sympathy with the latter custom. : "With assurance of my high regard, sincerely yours, "ROBERT ADAMS." - BANQUET IN BRYAN'S HONOR Speeches Laudatory of America De livered at Budapest Budapest, Hungary A banquet was given here in honor of William J. Bryan. Speeches laudatory of Ameri can freedom and virility were deliv ered by Count Albert Apponyi, min ister of . worship, and Francis Kos suth, : commerce minister. .". ', . fount . Apponyl compared the Uni ted , States to a giant accumulator, Droducing the strongest conceivable currents of the highest ideals of lib erty and equality. . "All of us," said the minister of worship, "feel more secure in the pos session of freedom because there ex ists such a land as the United States." , M. Kossuth, after a reference to the enthusiasm evoked in the United States by the visit of his father to that country said that the example of the United States had inspired Hungary to efforts to emulate that great, free country, which once was a colony. The best he could wish in behalf of Hungary was that her future might be as happy as the United States' present state, and her economic con dition as .flourishing. Mr. Bryan in reply said freedom loving Hungary which had waged so many struggles for liberty was en titled to rank high among nations as the equality "of peoples nowadays .was gauged by their love of freedom. ASKS LAW TO BAR SCIENTISTS varolem basis, and the rate is the , average one paid by all other property taxed in the state. This year it is 11 cents per $1,000 of valuation more than last year. The roads that pay the highest taxes are the Chicago and Northwestern, $870,715.05; Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul, $862,749.52; Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Omaha, $281,133.09; Wisconsin Cen 'tral, $253,51; Burlington, $110,404.49. These taxes must be - paid before August 10. The money goes to pay the general expenses of the state. Public Utilities Member of Parliament Demands Heal ers bev Forbidden to Practice ; : London In the house of commons John Brownlee Lonsdale, conservative Middle Armah, Ireland, demanded that legislative and bther measure "be tak en to prevent Christian Scientists from carrying on their practices, with the view to preventing danger to the lives of credulous people. Home Sec retary' Gladstone replied that the law touching the practice of medicine prob ably will be elucidated further by, the trial for manslaughter of Dr. Adcock, a Christian Science healer, who is ac cused of having caused the death of Major John Nicholas Whyte, who died while under his treatment. Until the trial is completed, Mr. Gladstone said, he could not express his opinion on the subject. , I , McCURDY MEN IN AGAIN Former Leaders of Insurance Company Once More Give Power New York The powers that were are slipping back into their old places in the Mutual Life Insurance company and, with the exception of changes in a few of the higher offices, it will be hard from now on to see wherein the insurance scandal has made, many changes , in the executive end of the company. The trustees at a meeting today announced that William S. Ste venson has been elected comptroller. New committees made up almost ex clusively of men who controlled the company under the McCurdy regime were elected. , TAX ON WISCONSIN RAILROADS State Board Announces Assessment on $237,239,500 of Property Madison, Wis.--The Wisconsin state board of assessment gave out its as sessment of railroad property in the state for the present year. The total valuation is $237,239,500, V which is $8,429,500 more than last year. .'; The total taxes are $2,700,237, or $120,916. 90 more than last year. . - The property is assessed oh ah ad Washington The senate agreed to a motion made by Mr. Gallinger, chair man of the committee on the District of Columbia, to recommit to that com mittee a bill authorizing the exten sion of the street railroad lines to the new Washington union railroad sta tion, reported yesterday by Senator Hansbrough as chairman of a sub committee. The bill as reported was not confined to the railroads, but it provided for an increase in the taxes of the public utility companies of the district amounting to 12 per cent on net earnings.1 Senator Gallinger ex pressed; the opinion that taxation legis lation was not germane to the original bill. Senator Hansbrough defended the action of the committee as regular and said the passage of the bill would result in an increase of $304,000 in the district's income. Senator Patterson, who opposed the motion to recommit, said the average cost of carrying passengers on pub licly owned street car lines Is 11-10 cents, and asserted that the manipu lations of the utility corporations is "the cause of 95 per cent tf the mu nicipal corruption that has made mu nicipal government a stench in the nostrils of the people." TO RECOMMIT RATE DILL Line up for Statehood Bill Washington The report of the con ference committee on the statehood bill will be presented to the senate. The provision regarding New Mexico and Arizona is in the language of the first Foraker amendment, which For aker now opposes. , He will conduct the fight against the adoption of the conference report, aided by Bailey with mo3t of the democrats at his back. Sant Fe Railroad Indicted Las Vegas, N. M. The federal grand jury has indicted the Santa Fe railroad for giving rebates to the Col orado Fuel & Iron company, and also the latter company for accepting them. Rockefeller to Europe New York Mr. and Mrs. "John D. Rockefeller were passengers on board the steamer Deutschland which sailed this week for Hamburg. - " : Right to ; Construct Canal ' Washington The senate has passed a bill granting right of way. for a canal between Lake Washington; and Puget Sound. - Senate Will Recommit Rate Bill to Committee- President Sends Message to Congress Washington, D. C, June 6. (Spe cial.) The president, as promised, sent the beef report to congress to gether with a message urging legis lation that would provide for adequate inspection of packing house products such that would foreyer make impos sible the scandals that have just been exposed, and. protect the health of the citizens against the greedy pack ers who undoubtedly have been guilty of an outrageous crime against so ciety at large by their pernicious and criminal practices. The necessity for the passage of the pure food bill is emphasized by this latest exposure, and already congressmen begin to fear the effects J upon their own - po litical fortunes fpf. their neglect in passing . suitable legislation to pro tect health and lives of the people Against the greed of the beef trust nnH mnnnfnrtiirprs nf nthor imntiro fOOd products. ' " ' ;'- The rate bill went through the conference- committee in much better shape than was . expected. In fact the changes that were made In con ference, were upon the whole an im provement to the bill. The free pass amendment was entirely rewritten and all the exceptions were stricken out, making the amendment .in fact nrhot It nnrnnrtoil in la 1ffrl clatirvn against issuing of free transportation by railroad companies. The pipe lines and express companies were included under the heading of common car riers, but the Pullman sleeping cars were stricken out of the list. The penalties for violation of the law; were retained. , But it seems that the con ference committee have exceeded their authority and introduced , new matter which is now being,; strenuously ob jected to by Senator Foraker and others, the result of which is the bill will have to be recommitted to the conference to correct the mistakes made and confine their work within its Jegjtimate sphere. . . : The death of Senator Gorman re moves from the senate one of the most prominent figures in Washing ton life. Senator Gorman was, the recognized leader of his party in con gress and recognized by. the country as a man of great ability and power. He had many friends among the re publican senators and was in fact con sidered a republican in principle al though a democrat by name and party affiliation. His work was more often the subject of praise than adverse criticism by the leading republicans in congress for many years. . The resignation of Senator Burton of Kansas saves congress ' the necesj sity of expelling him which would have occurred this week had his resig nation not been handed in to the gov ernor of his state and a report of the fsame made to the senate. '. Congressmen seem very much inter- i fcssLvu m witjicvtui ..repun ui iu . cany I home coming of Mr. Bryan. Repub