I , . . ' 'I . c d t , . ANNON OUT Of POWER : BUT IS S STILL SPEAKER } t , t . finsurgents and Democrats Remove S Him from Rules Committee , 191 : : to 155. : ! I { c i > , KE : RETAINS SPEAKER'S CHAIR , : fiesolution to Oust Him as Presiding Officer Is Voted Down by I Large Majority. , " Washington correspondence : Shorn of his power by a combina- tion of the Democrats and Republican insurgents , Joseph Gurney Cannon is ' , _ nor- merely the presiding officer of the , ! national House of Representatives. . The House Saturday afternoon I adopted a resolution amending the I rules so as to provide for the election 1 .of a committee on rules by the House ! itself , the committee to consist of ten , members and the speaker being in. I eligible to serve thereon. : The full text of the resolution as . : passed by the House is as follows : : "Resolved , That the rules of the r , House of Representatives be amended as follows : ) " 1. In Rule 10 , Paragraph 1 , strike " . out the words 'on rules , to consist of i five members. ' " I " 2. Add new paragraph to Rule 10 J as follows : : e "Paragraph V. There shall be a : mmittee on rules elected by the i . House consisting of ten members , six I ' of whom shall be members of the ma , jority party and four of whom shall DC members of the minority party. The I speaker shall not be a member of the committee and the committee shall " elect its own chairman from its own l , me. lbers. , "Resolved further , That within ten ; , . days after the adoption of this resolu tion there shall be an election of this I . committee , and immediately upon its I I - election the present committee on ! rules sliall be dissolved. " , . By a vote of 155 to 191 the House t 7 then defeated a resolution declaring the office of speaker vacated and pro- viding for the immediate election of a successor to Cannon. Nine insurgents voted with the Democrats in support of this resolution. At noon Friday the tense situation I existing never would have been . sus- i pected from the appearance on the , - - - - a II . ; z. 1 v N - \\N.T ; ! , ; ll spea7.er j I .Jo..se 1t. G ' " J C' OJJ. , . . I , I floor of the House. Apparently , it was l' l much more serene than it had been at &ny : time since the condition develop- ed. The insurgent Republicans were in conference and the regular Repub- licans were contending that the result of the meeting would be a compro- mise. mise.While While the conference was on , the House practically : was in recess. The i . . . . . 43veaker kept some one in the chair fpeaker ! : ut he wandered around the corridors t of the building apparently quite uncon cerned as to the ultimate effect of the strife on his own fortunes. The mem bers were good-natured and generally discussed the situation in a friendly manner. It was a memorable fight which day- t. light found still in progress in the House. A stubborn filibuster on the part of Speaker Cannon and the House organization and equally relentless at- tack on the part of the "allies"-these were the distinguishing features in the hottest fight that has yet been made to overthrow the present control of the House. It was extraordinary in . ttany ways. For instance , the odd 'x > ectacle was presented of the House s preponderantly Republican , ordering I the arrest of the absentees of that par ty on the motion of a Democrat car- ried by Democratic votes. Then , too. it is not often that a fill. buster is carried on by the regular ' ( House organization , virtually led by the Speaker , supposedly in full control , Of the House machinery , to prevent . consideration of a resolution designed l W overthrow that organization , make ' I f'/ the rules and reorganize radically the tomm ltee , the tenure of whose chair- , l manship is supposed to be the chief asset in the Speaker's wealth of power. It is many years , old observers say -In fact , no precise parallel has been I uggested - since the House remained t actually in session all night , and thaf after an all-day session. , - - I , , . . . ; . . ' . , ! ' . ' L - . . . ; J .4jjj"t. ! : , . ; . ' . . . H.riJr'd : tI&r' ; : ; ' - - " . . . 4..t16.'W" - ' ; " I F . I . HIS EASTER E GG . _ -F . _ . - _ . r.r : = . _ - - . ' . r.-- ' A " ' - - - - _ - . . , r--- - _ . . . . . . . , ' _ = ' - . , - T - - - - . ' " - -r' - . - - - ; - - - - - . . - - - - : . - - - - = , - . . \ I , \ , . / d . , . . , - J--- \ l l il . P IJOR'O d i * ( A . " ' / , , . I / - - - - -2-//7--4,1 , - . ll / : . ; . : : I _ 2 \ 0' " " C t3 ll/ ' ) t ( - . . _ lr ' ' ' . / ' W . cl ' 4- . . . < I - : . . ' . 0. . II I &EGTTLAKS COMPOSE COMMITTEE , . Republican Caucus Selects Only Friends of Speaker Cannon. Six regulars were chosen at the Republican caucus in Washington to represent the majority . party on the committee on rules which is to suc- ceed the committee retired by the revolution that took place in the House of Representatives a few days ago. The slate as prepared by the degular leaders was chosen , as follows : Henry Sherman Boutell , of Illinois ; John Dalzell , of Pennsylvania ; J. Sloat Fassett of New York ; Walter I. Smith , of Iowa ; George P. Law- rence , of Massachusetts ; Sylvester C. Smith , of California. Both Smith , of Iowa , and Dalzell , are members of the present commit- tee on rules , having been appointed to places thereon by Speaker Cannon. Representative Boutell is one of Speak- er Cannon's closest friends and gre t- est -admirers and placed Mr. : Cannon in nomination for President at the Chicago convention in 1908. Mr. Law- rence , Massachusetts , has long been a close friend of Speaker Cannon. Mr. Fassett is one of the orators of the "regulars. " Representative Smith , of California , has always been one of the most regular Republicans in the House. Speaker Cannon attended the cau- cus , but took no prominent part in -the proceedings. He made no speech ; had nothing whatever to say except in the heart-to-heart whispered talks he indulged in with his lieutenants of old. All the insurgents attended the caucus except Gardner , Massachu setts , who was kept away by illness. The insurgent leaders express com- plete satisfaction in the work of the caucus. None of them bolted or criti cized in any way the result of the balloting. Out of the total Republican membership of the House-216-there were present 189. SENTENCES MUCH MARRIED MAN. l1'orcIgncrVho Po cdas : Baron , Convicted on Perjury ; Charge. Arthur F. Zimmerman , the impress- ive-looking foreigner said to have posed as "Baron von Lichtenstein" when seeking matrimonial alliances with title-loving women of means , was sentenced in Brooklyn , N. Y. , to from four years and eight months to nine years and six months in prison. He was convicted on a charge of perjury in having sworn falsely that he was i unmarried when applying last April for a license to marry a Brooklyn wom an. Judge Dike , in imposing sentence , scored Zimmerman for having married twenty-four women since 1872. Zim- merman has nineteen children , six of whom are twins. He is under indict- ment for bigamy. - MOUNT ETNA IN ERUPTION. Volcano ThroTvs Lava on Towns from Four Xevr Cratera. Seven violent earthquakes of vol canic origin occurred at Mileto , Prov- ince of Catanzaro , Italy , the other morning. Similar shocks : were felt at Messina. Mount Etna suddenly be- came active and four new craters were opened. Professor Ricco ' of the Mount Etna Observatory confirmed this news. He declares that more than twenty slight shocks occurred. The lava is extending and descending toward Vol- U Girolema , toward the cultivated lands and the villages on the sides of the mountain. . . , ' " . , - . : . . , . , ' . ' , , . : . : ' . . : r , . rat * iMt Md / . < 'tiS'e4 : a4 . . h ' leux ' tt 6oth' : : > li4J..1fiIt'JWi ! i y CONGRESSMAN WHO BROUGHT ABOUT CANNON'S DOWNFALL. ; z # rift ; : . , \ # b V ' - : ; ' : : : : . : : . : : . : : : : I : : : : ' , , ( ) eo e. . . ' : : : : . : = f . : : : : Qm \7J. N&t"i ! : 'fJt : ; , . : . . ( ' . . , " Ll I George William Norris , representa tive from the Fifth Nebraska district whose onslaught on Cannon has made him famous from Maine to California , has worked his way , despite many handicaps , up to a position of emi- nence. He was born on a farm in Sandusky , Ohio , in 1861. His father died when he was a babe , his only brother was killed in the Civil War , and his mother was left in straitened circumstances. He worked among the neighboring farmers in the summer months and attended school only in the winter , became a country school- master , studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1883. Then the West opened vistas of preferment , and he went to Nebraska in 1855 and soon began to be conspicuous in politics. In 1895 he was elected District Judge of the Fourteenth Nebraska District. Four years later he was re-elected to the same position , which he held when he was nominated to the Fifty-eighth Congress , and since that time he has represented the Fifth District. Mr. Norris is a man of strong personality and is a ready debater. yP OI r I ® o a ( r.d c , > lu i 'v a s . "S ± < 7Z-a-- ' " ? * - Mr. : Bryan has declared to friends that he is not a candidate for another nomination to the presidency of the United States. He says that he neither desires nor expects to be a candidate again. Leroy Percy , of Greenville , Miss. , was chosen United States Senator from Mississippi on the fifty-eighth ballot of the Democratic caucus by a majority of five votes over former Governor Var- daman. The nomination is equivalent to election. The volume of campaign literature sent out during a national campaign Is being eclipsed by the bulk of letters , speeches and pamphlets now being poured Into tho so-called doubtful and insurgent States by the Republican Congressional Committee. In the two months since Gaynor be- came mayor of New York he has dropped over 400 politicians from the pay roll of tttfe city. He dismissed 125 politicians in a single day. He has cut salaries aggregating $855,000 a year and made savings In expenditures amounting to $2,000,000 . . . . . . - per' Y a.r. . . . . , . ; - , . ; , ' ' ' ; ' . ' , ' ' " 0 : , " " . , . " , . ' . - . . .I' ' . ' - . < : ; " . . . . . . . , . . _ . . . . i. . . . . ; 1- - , " . . " " " 4 TO RAISE MAINE HTJLK Opportunity May Be Afforded to Study How Vessel Was Destroyed. The National House of Representa tives has passed a bill providing for the raising of the hulk of the ill-fated battle ship Maine , which was sunk in the harbor of Havana in 1898. If the Senate approves the bill the opportun- ity will be afforded to recover the bod- ies of any of the dead sailors that may be within the wreck and also fur- nish a way for an examination to de- termine if possible the manner in which the vessel was destroyed. The bodies of sailors that might be recovered would be interred in Arling- ton Cemetery on the Virginia shore , opposite Washington. The mast of the Maine would be erected in the ceme- tery near the graves of the Maine dead. As passed by ' the House the bill was changed in its general terms , so as to authorize the work to be done under the direction of the engineer corps of the army with the consent of the re public of Cuba. By the insistance of Mr. Sulzer of New York , the bill was worded to require the "raising" as well . as the "removal" of the wreck , so that an examination could be made of the hulk to determine the manner of the vessel's destruction. WINS IN REPUBLICAN FORT. E. N. Foss First Democrat to Carry 14th Massachusetts District. Eugene N. Foss of Boston the other day was elected to Congress from the Fourteenth District of Massachusetts. : Running on the Democratic ticket in a district which in 1908 gave the late William C. Lovering , Republican , a plurality of 14,256 , Mr. Foss defeated William R. Buchanan of Brockton , the Republican nominee by 5,617 votes. The victor in this election is a brother of Congressman George Edmund Foss of Chicago. Mr. \ Foss was adopted as the favorite son of the old colony dis trict by the decisive action of Repub- licans and Democrats , who gave major- ities to him in thirty-three of the for- ty-four towns and in the two cities in the district. The Democratic candi- date invaded Brockton , the home of his opponent , and secured the major I portion of the votes , winning in that city by a plurality of 171. This show- ing in the Fourteenth District is ag gressively and demonstratively insur- gent. It turned a majority of 14,000 for a Republican into an excess of 5- ' 617 for a Democrat of comparatively I recent conversion. GENERAL HURT ; WOMAN KILLED Trolley Car Demolishes Automobile on a Washington Road. Major General J. Franklin Bell , chief of staff of the army , was badly but probably not dangerously injured , and Mrs. Herbert J. Slocum , wife of Major Slocum , of the Seventh Cavalry was almost instantly killed in a collision of their automobile with a trolley car on the Tenallytown road in the north west outskirts Washington. . Gen- eral Bell had one rib broken , suffered a painful scalp wound and severe bruis- es. The chauffeur was uninjured. Mrs. Slocum lived only a few moments. Her husband is attached to the headquar- ters of the Department of the East at Governors Island , New York. General Bell absolved the trolley car motorman from blegne I for the . accident. . - - - - - 4 . ' . , " ' . ' ' " , ' . l . \ GRAFT BILLS SNARE FORTY. Barely Quorum Left When Accused Men Plead Guilty and Resign. An embarrassing situation has de- veloped in Pittsburg's councilmanic bodies , through the enforced resigna- tions of a number of members because ! of confessions of guilt in connection with the bribery .conspiracy and oth- ers that are expected to be demanded by reason of the indictments found against forty ; present and former mem- bers by the grand jury. It is not known if there are enough members left to form a quorum. It is consid- ered fortunate in official circles that the budget was passed before the storm broke , as there might have been diffi- culty in arranging special meetings to pass the bills which had become laws before taxes could be collected. The penalty to which the guilty councilmen are liable under the law is a fine not exceeding $10,000 , imprisonment not exceeding five years , and to be forever debarred from holding any place of profit or trust In the commonwealth. "Capt. " John Klein , who started the municipal uproar by his confession , is guarded by two detectives at a down- town hotel. His meals are being served in his rooms and his every want satisfied. Judge Frazer of the Criminal Court sat as a committing magistrate to hear pleas of council- men who wish to "come forward" and receive suspended sentences. Anxious to receive the immunity bath , three I former members of the Common Coun cil appeared and pleaded "no defense" to charges of having received money for their votes In the passage of bank and street vacation ordinances. Two of the men who appeared were not even I under indictment. All were given sus. pended sentences. MABRAY IS CONVICTED. Jurors in Council Bluffs Trial Find Alleged Swindler and Aids Guilty. John C. Mabray and thirteen of his associates , who for ten days have been on trial in the United States District Court in Council Bluffs , charged with illegal use of the mails in connection with an extensive "fixed" race swin dle , were found guilty in a verdict by the jury which heard the case. Rob- ert E. L. Goddard of San Antonio , the fifteenth defendant , secured a disa- greement. Those convicted with Mabray were Leon Loser , Tom S. Robinson , Willard Powell , Clarence Class , Edward Leach : ! Edward K. Morris , Clarence Forbes . Harry Forbes , Frank Scott , Ed Mc Coy , Winford S. Harris , Bert R. Shores I and William ( "Ole" ) Marsh. The 1 last-named three entered a plea of I nolle contendre when the trial opened , which was , in effect , a plea of guiltr.I I With the conviction of Mabray and ! I his associates the government believes it has broken up the most .monumen tal swindling combination which ever has operated. Statistics have been gathered which show the receipts of the combination since its organizatiou about ten years ago to have exceeded $5,000,000. LOVE OF DRESS LEADS TO PRISON f Ohio Girl Who Gave Sister Mysteri 4 ous Tablet Faces Murder Charges.s .Sixteen-year-old Catherine Manz end ed her restless girlhood in a prison cell in Massillon Ohio , the other night under a charge of murder. At a pre- liminary hearing before Mayor Remley the prisoner entered a plea of not guilty to the charge of murder in the first degree. Later the girl faced an other long cross examination as to the death of her sister , Elizabeth , to whom she says she gave a mysterious tablet Friday not long before the elder girl fell dying to the door. In her confused first story to the chief of police and the coroner the child prisoner declared that she had purchased a drachm of strychnine for ( a man , who later presented her with 1 two capsules to give her sister. She I ] has declined to tell who this man is ] and the police are inclined to believe ] that he is only a figure of her imagina 1 tion. It is known , however , that her 1 love of clothes , and her extravagances led her into many escapades. Her friends will be called upon to tell what ( they know of her relations with hel sister. a BEEF FIRMS ARE INDICTED. t * : afioiial Packing Company and Tee u ! Jsitl1urlc Are lIlt. it Indictments against the National v Packing Ccmpany and ten subsidiary t corporations , charged with operating in restraint of trade , were'returned by S the federal grand jury in Chicago. Si t multaneously , a bill in equity : was filed by the government in which the courts are asked to dissolve the parent con cern. The double barreled blow is cal culated by government officials to have a far-reaching effect and shortly after a tlje grand jury was discharged it was authoritatively stated that criminal prosecution of individuls might follow. The civil action was filed by United States District Attorney Sims , under instructions from Attorney General Wickersham. jj o * TWO , LYNCHED , HELD 'SUICIDES ' 1e c Arkansas Coroner' Verdict Ignores MOD'S Part in Hanging According to the verdict of the corq oner "Bob" Austin and "Charley" Richardson , the negroes lynched at Marion , Ark. , for their alleged part In a recent jail delivery , "came to their death by suicide. " The coroner in his verdict made no mention of the inci r dents leading to the "suicides , " in eluding the breaking open of the jail by a mob and taking of the two ne- jj groes to the courthouse square where c their bodies . were _ f jourid . . - . - hanging lataf f - - ' ( " ' , ' "J 7'G' , " " . , . " < The Week in Conoress - - - In the Senate Thursday Mr. Cum mins delivered the third section of his address. on tne administration railroad bill and was interrupted by adjourn ment. A mighty battle was ' precipitat ed in the House early in the day by a resolution offered by the insurgents to select a new committee on rules and exclude Speaker Cannon from membership. Several times the speak er was defeated and he was finally forced to adopt a filibuster to delay action. Up to a late hour the result was undecided. ' In the Senate Friday Senator Cum mins concluded his speech on the ad ministration railway bill after which routine business was transacted. The House spent the entire day in dead lock on the Norris resolution changing the Committee on Rules , which ended . just before 5 o'clock with an agre& ment to take the matter up the next day. By a vote of 191 to 155 the Republi can insurgents voting solidly with the Democrats , the House Saturday adopt * ed the resolution of Representative Norris , Republican , of Nebraska , re- quiring a reorganization of the rules committee , increasing its membership from five to ten , and declaring the Speaker < ineligible to membership thereon. By the curiously identical vote of 191 to 155-but with a decid edly different personnel of alignment -the House defeated a resolution ol Representative Burleson of Texas de claring the Speakersliip vacant and ordering an immediate election of a successor to Mr. Cannon. As a calm follows a storm , the House of Representatives met in sol : emn session Sunday to pay tribute to one of its late members , Robert C. Davy of Louisiana. Only one mem ber , Representative Townsend of Mich- igan , made reference to the exciting incidents of the last few days on the floor , when he said , in introducing hi3 remarks : "I am much impressed with the difference of the scenes now and those of a few hours ago. " Repre- sentative Broussard of Louisiana occu- pied the chair during the session ex cept for time enough to deliver his eulogy of his late colleague. The oth er speakers were Messrs. Wagner oJ Pennsylvania , Adamson of Georgia , Gilmore , Ransdell , Pujo and Estopinal of the Louisiana delegation. Other members who did not speak were granted permission to print their eu logies in the Record. In the Senate Monday , Mr. Elkini supported the administration railroad bill in an extended speech. A num ber of minor bills were passed , includ ti ing i one appropriating 3,600,000 t . purchase twelve blocks for an enlarge Er ment of the grounds surrounding thE capitol. : : A very quiet and uneventful session was held by the House. B , unanimous consent numerous bills oJ minor importance were passed and thi pension appropriation bill , carrying nearly $156,000,000 , was taken up. Th House agreed to limit general debate upon the measure to eight hours Representative Gillette , of Massachu- setts , talked on the necessity of econ omy in government expenditures. Rep resentative Goulden , of New York , op posed ship subsidy legislation and Rep resentative Langley , of Kentucky , ad- vocated more liberal pensions. 'The Senate Tuesday began consid ration of a bill providing for a codi fication of laws relating to the judi ciary. Senator Clapp , speaking upon the : administration's railroad bill , ex pressed confidence that it would be materially amended before its final passage. The general debate on thf pension appropriation bill continued throughout : the day in the House. . The bill providing . for codification of the laws relating to the judiciary was under consideration during almost the entire session of the Sen Wednesday. . The raising of the bafc tie ship Maine , now submerged in the harbor of Havana , was provided for in a bill passed by the House. Under the provision of this measure the ' wreck of the Maine can be examined to determine the manner of its de- struction. The remains of the sailor dead that may be found will be in terred in Arlington Cemetery. The House also passed a bill providing a penalty of not more than $1,000 fine or imprisonment for not more than two years in the case of any proprietor ol L place of amusement in the District of . Columbia and territories who may refuse admission to a soldier or sailor of the United States because of hlr uniform. TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES Jerome Post , a New York broker , , , has been sued for $50,000 for breacb of , promise in the Supreme Court ; ) f New York County by Miss : Alma Brod- rick , 5S26 South Park avenue , Chi- cago. The criminal division of the Supreme Court : of Missouri upheld the law re- quiring : all deals in futures to bear tamps of 25 cents. Announcement was made in Mexico City : that Paul Morton head of the Equitable , has been appointed vice president of the Pan-American Rail- oad. The Council of the United Reformed Churches : , representing the entire field , rl the United States of churches work- ' . ing under a Presbyterian form of - hurch government , met in Louisviila- , for a three-day convention. - . I 1