Newspaper Page Text
Wl Waste Money *‘‘
. On circulars and hand*
' bills when you can put an
advertisement in .such a
far*reeching medium as
The Tribune.
ESTABLISHED 1887.
ENJOINING
THE MINERS.
Hearing of Case in Com
mon Pleas Court.
HANY PEOPLE THERE
i _
Hew York and Cleveland Gas Coal Co.
Ys. U. «. I. on.
BRENNAN FOR DEFENDANTS
i
Plaintiffs Set Forth That Em
ployes Are Satisfied.
-STs?tfilS INTERFERE WITH THEM
V
Motions Made By Attorneys Are Killed Ont.
President DeArmitt Takes the Stand.
Bis Testtmony.
■ . -CO
i
r Pittsburg, Aug. 16.—The hearing in
the equity cash!bitt the New York and
Cleveland Gas_Coaf company against
♦ the United of America
was called at 10 o’clock a tn. in com
men pleas Na 1 befot*d Judges Stowe
and Collier. The courtroom was crowded
an hour before court opened.
The plaintiffs were represented by
Attorneys Schoyer, Kauffman and Hall,
while William J. Brennan, appeared for.
the defendants. The affidavit in which
* the preliminary injunction was issued
was made by William P. DeArmitt,
president of the New York and Cleve
land company, and set forth that the
plaintiffs* employes were under con
tract; that the terms were mutually sat
isfactory, and that both parties were
ready and willing to fulfill their re
spective duties under it, but the strikers
by marching, encamping and other
methods prevented many of the men
from carrying out their port of the
agreement. It also recited the com
pany’s contract to supply coal to plants
in the United States outside Pennsylva
nia and abroad, to supply the Pittsburg
pumping station W-ith coal, which de
mands a daily supply in order to keep
up the service of water in tne city of
‘Pittsburg. Officers of the United Mine
Workers of America were named in the
bill and the purposes of the organiza
tion are sat forth, together with a his
tory of the strike. .
” When court opened, Mr. Schoyer, on
behalf of the plaintiff company, filed a
motion to make the preliminary injunc
tion permament and Mr. Brenuan.made
a counter motion to dissolve it.
Judge Stowe decided both motions''
oat of order and President DeArmitt
was called to the stand Hts testimony
did not materially differ from toe affi
davits filed when the preliminary in
junction was issued.
BIG LABOR MEETING CALLED
Anticipating Unfavorable Action of Court
Bvory laibor Organization Moots.
Pittsburg, Aug. 16.—A meeting of"
all the officials of every labor organiza
tion in the city of Pittsburg has been
called at the headquarters of the Amal
gamated Association of Iron and Steel
WVt.t, jrs to confer with and take such
action as may be asked by the local offi
cers of the United Mine Workers Union
of America. It is anticipated that the
hearing on the injunction may go
y against them and the temporary re
straint put upon the miners at Turtle
Creek and other mines of the New work
and Cleveland Gas Coal company from
marching and persuading the miners
> of the DeArmitt mines may be made
1“ permanent
i There is a movement on foot to diso-
I bey the injunction, and the strikers and
.’the miners, under the leadership of
President Patrick Dolan, Secretary
William Warner, Frank McKenna,
Paul Trimmer and Cameron Miller will
continue to march to the mines. Then
it is expected the leaders and perhaps
many of the rank and file will be ar
rested. There will be no resistance to
the arrests and in that case the strikers
will be without a head.
STRIKERS ARE OUTWITTED.
Xumb.t of Meu E.uilo Their ▼igllauoe
end So to Work.
Aug. 16.—Taking advant-
of the suspension of marching, a
u|nber of men went to work during
th#morning at the Oak Hili'mines.
Tity were gotten in by strategy and
th< 'trikers were outwitted.
- Aijeuts of the company have been at
work among the strikers for over a
L week, nfld although they have induced
IA some -tglyturia, the result has been dis-
B hi>t>oiM*lW- I* thought enough
■ wen W®Vl be procured to run tbe mins 1
THE ROME TRIBUNE.
HE HAY BE RESPITED
Perry May Not Hang on Next
Wednesday..
Governor is Investigating the Al
leged Assault Upon
Mrs. Perry.
_ i
Atlanta, Aug. 16.—H. O, Perry, the
murderer, may be respited tomorrow for
two weeks. His counsel have made
strenuous efforts for a respite from the
governor, but have not, until now receiv
ed any encouragements.
The governor is now investigating the
alleged assault upon Mrs. Perry, and this
investigation may result in a respite for
two weeks or more. ’
Perry’s lawyers will make every ef
fort to obtain a new trial if possible.
RAPIST NOT CAUGHT.
The Man Who Assaulted Miss Beatoock
Still At Large.
Chattanooga, Tenn., Aug. 16.
The fiend who assaulted Miss Heath
cock in Chickamauga Park last Satur
day is still at large.
The whole country is stirred up
over this crime and should the man
be caught, he is certain to be lynched.
A large party of men have been
seaching for this fiend all Sunday and
Monday, but have found no trace of
him,
A full story of the crime was told
io Sunday’s Tribrune.
Seen In Borne.
It is believed by I. F. Davis that
the white tramp who assaulted Miss
Heathcock was in Rome last Wednes
day. The fellow who answered the
description in every particular called
at Mr. Davis’ machine shop in West
Rome, and said he was a machinist.
He went from here to Chattanooga.
NATIONAL LEAGUE. *
Baltimore Still Gaining—The Western Tea ns
Save Kstired for a Few Days.
Washington, Aug. 16.—Baltimore is
working hard to regain lost ground, but
Boston manages to hold her own at all
times.
Following is the score for today:
Boston 5, Washington 2.
Pittsburg 3, Louisville 2
New York 7, Philadelphia 2.
Baltimore 14, Brooklyn 5.
inTun. rue agents worked Hara,
found about one-half of the men iu full
sympathy with the demand of 69 cents,
while the remainder were afraid to go
to work.
Eig;ht Haodred Join the Strikers.
Matewan, W. Va., Aug. 16.—Eight
hundred miners at Simmons Creek and
Logan turned strikers. Fifteen hun
dred men are now out in the Norfolk
and Western district.
More Injunctions.
Parkersburg, Aug. 16.—Judge Jack
son issued two more injuuotions agatasl
the Licking miners.
WAGES ARE TO BE RAISED.
Iz This a Harbinger of the Long Prom
ised Mo Kinley Prosperity?
Chester, Pa... Aug. 16. The em
ployes of George O. Hetzel & Co , man
ufacturers of woolen goods, have been
notified that the wages paid in 1893
would be restored on Sept. 6, next. The
notice was a surprise, as the restoration
was granted by the firm without solici
tation on the part of the hands. Hetzel
& Co. employ several hundred people.
Since 1892 two redactions of wages
have been made, aggregating about 20
per cent, and until three weeks ago the
mill bos been running on half time.
The firm has of late received many new
orders and the employes are working
full time.
N®jfro Preachers "Make Bond.
Montgomery, Ala., Aug. 16 The
habeas corpus trial of Stokes and the
other negro preachers who have been in
jail here for several weeks, charged with
being conspirators in the murder of
Patterson, their rival churchman, who
was killed in the pnlpit of the Colum
bus Street Baptist church on July .‘B,
was concluded just before midnight.
The negroes were all allowed b> : L
Stokes in the sum of $1,500, the others
to the amount of $750 each. The evi
dence tending to show conspiracy was
entirely circumstantial.
Hr.k.m.a Cut In Twain.
' Savannah, Aug. 16. —O. J. Swine
ford, a brakeman on the Georgia and
Alabama railroad, fell from a car near
Eliabelle, 20 miles from Savannah, and
his body was cut entirely in twa Swine
find was on a passenger train coming
toward Savannah, where he expecte< to
meet his wife and babies. He was a
younte man and an excellent railr d
baud. He leaves two children besides
his wife.
</«h nva’ii Murderer t<» Die.
Madrid. Ang. 16.—Michael Anglo
llllo, the anarchist assassin of Premier
Oanovas del Castillo, was tried by court
martial at Veragara, was found guilty
and sentenced to death. .
ROME, GA. TUESDAY,
THE LEGION
OFHONOR.
I
Policy Holder Applies
for a Receiver.
A JERSEY CITY MAH
Trouble for the Well Known Mutual
Insurance Order.
THE SPECIFIQATIOHS OF THE BILL.
Charges That Two Classes
Have Been Created.
ALSO CHANGE ORIGINAL CONTRACT
Court A'ked to Enjoin Management From
Separat ng Monies Receined From
As-essments
New York, Aug. 16.—The Herald
■ays: It is anuqunced in Jersey City
that papers have been filed in the United
States court at Boston ou behalf of Jo
seph McNamara of Jersey Oity for the
appointment of a receiver for the Amer
ican Legion of. Honor. The petitioner
asks that the receiver shall take charge
of all moneys paid in as assessments by
members of the order and that the le
gion of honor be enjoined from separat
ing moneys received by it from former
assessments as is now dona.
The bill sets forth that when Mc-
Namara became a member of the legion
of honor, each life insurance certificate
was charged upon money received from
assessments and the number of deatns
regulated the number of assessments
ordered; that ou Dec 1, 1896, a change
was made and persons holding certifi
cates were divided into two classes and
that the money received from each class
was held separate, and wus charged
only with the payment of certificates iu
the class to which the moneys belonged,
thereby changing the object of the orig
inal contracts without the assent of the
members who made the contracts aud
also increasing the number of assess
ments. i
The American Legion of Honor was
incorporated in Massachusetts to carry
on the business of life insurance upon a
mutual benefit plan. Moneys received
from the assessments were put into a
common fund.
Mr. McNamara took out a $3,000 life
insurance policy in the order in 1888.
Recently the American Legion of
Honqr began a suit against two of the
seceding councils of this city to recover
sick benefit fuuds which had not been
turned over to the supreme council af
ter the branches had seceded.
Members of the branches assert that
the supreme council is not entitled to
the sick benefit fuuds because it never
had any jurisdiction over them.
PRISONERS OF THE STORM.
Party Nearly Starved and Frozen on
Mount Tacoma’s Summit.
Tacoma, Wash., Aug. 16. —J. E.
Mitchell and wife. Miss J. E. McFar
lane of Sumuer and Sergeant F. A.
Hall of Puyallup were nearly starved
and frozen to death at the top of Mount
Tacoma last week. They were held:
prisoners for three nights and four de
by a storm. As the party was ascend-/
iug the mouutifin the storm gutnered
and increased to a hurricane just ai
they scrambled over the rim of a crater
into i place of shelter. They remained
huddled together during the first night
aud not au eye closed in sleep.
The next day ati attempt was made
by the meu to prepare for au escape,
but the wind blew them back from tne
crater’s rim. The second night was
passed in a sheltered ire cavern with
sulphur laden steam risiug on all sides
of them. Prunes aud hard tack, soft
ened by the steam was the bill of fare
and before the morning of the fourth
day every morsel had been devoured.
In addition to the prospect of freezing
to death, the party was face to face
with starvation. The storm broke on
the fourth day and all escaped.
The Mitcltell party reoorts that the
Mauzamas burned for firewood the big
flagpolee, which Oscar Brown of Ole
elnm risked his lire to carry to the top
of the mountain five yean ago. On
this pole the largest American Sag ever
unfurled at a 8 mile altitude was hung.
The mountain climbers from all parts
of the world carved their names on the
staff.
Not First Ams latent I'oatmsater Gvnaral-
Indianapolib, Aug. 16.—There is no
truth in the report of a mishap to First
Assistant Postmaster General Heath.
The report grows out of au accident to
Mr. Heath’s brother. The first assist- i
ant postmaster general is iu Maine a
UGUST 17, 1897.
BREAKS THE RECORD
Field lias Served longer Than
Any Supreme Justice.
His Record of Over Thirty-Five
Years . Beats That of Chief
Justice Marsha.!!.
-
' ■ -
Washington, Aug. 16. Associate
Justice Stephen Field of the supreme
court of the United States breaks the
record for continuous service on the su
preme bench, having served 84 years,
five months and six days, or one aay
longer than former Chief Justice John
Marshall, whose record of service has
hitherto been the longest of all the jus
tices since the establishment of the na
tional tribunal of last resort.
It is probable that his seat upon the
bench will become vacant in the near
future, aud upon his retirement Attor
ney General McKenna, according to
the present understanding, will succeed
him.
The vacancy in the attorney general
ship, it is expected, will theu be filled
by Judge Goff of West Virginia.
COUNT AND PRINCE FIGHT.
A Fast and Fnrlou, • oiitezt In Which the
Frenchman >• Badly Hurt.
Pkßip, Aug. 16 —The count of Turin
and Prince Henri of Orleans fought a
duel with swords at 5 o’clock Sunday
morning in the Bois de Marechaux at
Vancressen. M. Leontieff acted as um
pire.
The fightingowas most determined
and lasted 26 minutes. There were five
engagements, of which two were at
close quarters.
Prince Henri received two serious
wounds in the right shoulder and the
right side of the abdomen. The oount
of Turin was wounded in the right
hand. Prince Henri was taken to the
residence, of the Due de Chartres and
received medical attention.
The seconds of Prince Henri- of Or
leans were M. de Leontiefi, governor
general of the equatorial provinces of*
Abyssinia, and M. Raoul Mourichou.
The count of Turin’s were General
Oount Avagradorde Quinto and the
Marquis Carlo di GinorL
The condition <jf Prince Henri is as
satisfactory as could be expected. The
dootoragf after consultation, have »4-
presseaFthe opinion that no important
organ 7 was touched, but absolute rest
was n/ecessary for recovery.
Vuelltota to Hv Excommuoloated.
' Rolmb. Aug. 16.—A special disoatch
from! Rome says it is reported there that
the []>ope will excommunicate Prince
Henri of Orleans and the Oount of Tu
rin, As duelling is forbidden by the Ro
man Catholic church. <
SEN. M’LAURIN IMPROVING.
I HI. Frl.ad. BxpMs lfi» Karly Raeovery.
Trouble, Mental Overexertlon.
1 Colombia, 3. 0., Aug. 16.—Senator
McLaurin's condition is said to be
slightly improved. His private secre
tary wired from Bennettsville to one of
the senator’s friends, saying:
I “Senator McLaurin rested well last
night and is ’brighter this morning.”
One of his most intimate friends spent
the day in the city and expressed the
greatest uneasiness about the result of
the senator’s illness. His friends here
think it is simply a collapse from physi
cal and mental overexertion in the cam
paign at this season of the year, and
that he will rapidly recuperate with a
little rest. They are not apprehensive
as/to the result.
There has been no news from the sen
ator’s home during the night. Governor
Ellerbe, who was wired for, is still with
him.
Fearful Fight With a Whlzky Manias.
: Narragansett Pier, R. L, Aug. 16.
Henry M. Greens, assistant keeper of
tihe Whale' Rock lighthouse, was ar-
I rested and brought here for trial for a
murderous attack made upon the keeper,
Captain Allen. He has been suspended
by the Washington authorities pending
-inquiry. Captain Alien has two deep
gashes on his forehead and gives evi
dence of having endured a terrible
struggle with the assistant, a Swede.
Henry Green has been in the habit of
going on sprees. He went to Narragan
sett Pjer Saturday aud got raving drunk.
When he returned to the Whale Rock
lighthouse at night he was ready for a
fight. He imagined every one was
“down on him.” He found Captain
Allen washing decks barefooted and
clad in snirt and trousera When the
captain remonstrated with him, the
drunken Swede attacked him.
Morn Miners F„r the Klonuiue.
San Francisco, Aug. 16. The Alask# ‘
Commercial company’s schooner, Jamas
Weatherway sailed for Unga with*
cargo of supplies and six iiiipers,/ WW
are to work in the company's gold
mines on that island. The Klondike
excitement struck Unga with fgll fores
and matiy of the miners Who hud been
working there have gone to the new
fields.
4 1 . 1 I ■'* ■ ‘‘
A »tMm«rC»p<lan. « r.
Berlin, Aug. 16.4; Ads patch
Dresden announces ferry steamer
plying between
capsized by the waah of wdarge steamer’’
and over 50 WWWfc
the water, people<aiv.k*toWn to ‘
TO DIE HE
COMES HOME.
President ol Life Insur
ance Co. Returns.
FUGITIVE FROM LAW
James S Parsons Who Took $125,000
of Continental Lite.
-
DEIS PENNILESS,. AGED AND WORN
Lived in Canada Since He
Wrecked the Company.
HE HAS RETURNED TO HIS OLD HOME
Only Sixty Ye*r3 Old. But Long Exile and
Disease Have Made a Complete
Wreck of Him.
New York, Aug. 16.—A dispatch to
The Herald from Hartford, Oonn., says:
James & Parsons, the fugitive presi
dent of the Continental Life Insurance
company, has returned after an absence
of ten years, penniless,, to pay his debt
to nature. He is said to have an incur
able disease of the stomach and can live
but a short time. He has been living
in Canada since the wrecking of the
company, but for a year or so intimate
friends have known that he was in
Massachusetts, latterly in Boston hos
pital
He appeared in Willimantic, so much
aged and worn as not to be recognized
and was taken iu a carriage to his home
in Windham Center. He is only 60
} years old. but his long exile and disease
i have wrought sad havoo with his phy-
I sique. He was hunted out of the United
States by the officers of the law, But re
' turned in the Hope that he may breathe
his last in his own home. State Insur
-1 anoe Commissioner R. Flyer began ths
J prosecution against him ip 1887, It
< was believed that Parsons* defalcations
J amounted to between SIOO,OOO and $150,-
' 000, 'though what he had done with the
i money was a mystery. Four indict-
I meats for making false returns to the
insurance commissioner were out against
’ him and the company’s bookkeeper.
| Later those against the bookkeeper were
; quashed.
i Partons held a prominent place in so
|. cial and New York business circles.
I ?hq company was established in 1884
, on the tontine accumulation plan, and
i had more than 39,000 polioyholders.i
I with a leported accumulation of more.
: than $6,500,000.
John R. Buck and Lorin A. Cooke,
who is now governor, were appointed
receivers of the company. With almost
nothing to start with they have suc
ceeded in paying a total of 16 per cent
to the stockholders, finally selling out
for $125,000.
CAUGHT IN THE RAILS.
william Coomb, Held Fast While tbe
Engine 'rushes Ont Life. . e.'«
Marietta. Ga., Aug. .16. —Sunday
1 afterjuoon William Coombs was stands
. ing upoti the tracks of the Westesiiamk'
Atlantic railroad with his foot caught
fast be ween two rails. An. warn
rapidly approaching, and , tgjic-asj het
would he could uot extricate
He frantically cried out to the eng'-
neer to stop, and as eoohas his trims’M
distress were heard, then engineer MP
versed his engine and put, w, brake#.,
•Jut it was too lata. s Standiug. there
he saw the great' ‘engine rush up to him.
In another moment he was knocked
down and the heavy wheels passed over
both bis legs 'jdst tfbove the ankles.
He was taken up tenderly as possible 1
and borne to>s plaoe where medieal at
, tentiou could be rendered. nin-i-vn r
Bpsides his legs<being«nnhed, he bus*
taipsd a fracture, of , she spinal column.
was nhmediately telegraphed for, but
she arrived after ddath had relieved his
awful suffSri ugh- h,J,t ’ «*” ■" c
’ r Ths unfortunate, man Was a ton of l
Judge Goombe,of Ringgold. He: had
beau in,,thejrailroad business for■ .14
years was a trusted and faithful
mr-nsn.:- Mi;
;4s«»rraaai'>iemaJ<iz Acting Premier. ti.
Madrip,' Aug.- 18.-‘-The attempt of'
Sendr ' Ro'mhro Robledo, ’the Spanish
1 minister bf justice, ’to Rstonie the Obn
•efyative leadership has, failed. \ Fob.
lowing trii' public declaration in favof
of* riie t’Ctoution 'tff Captain Geiibrdi
Weyldt 'hi Cuba'Shd dgainst l any recoup
eiliatimi wiilu.ahe /Dissident Conserva- 1
.Conservative leaders
liiytr piveq... yiejr;, adhesion ( t<i /Geiwml
Tall to Toor Trad".
The Tribune has the
largest circulation of any
newspaper in North Geor*
gla. It reaches your trade
daily,
PRICE FIVE CENTS
FUNERAL AT WINONA
Senator George, of Mississippi,
to Be Laid to Rest.
v . ■ i
Congressional Committees Named.
Body Lay in State at the Cap
itol at Jackson.
Jackson, Miss., Aug. 16— The re
mains of Senator J. Z ' George were re
moved from the rotunda of the state
house, where they have been lying in
state since <2 o’clock Sunday, and ai 2
p. m. will be taken in a special oar at
tached to the regular train to Winona
wnere a special traiu will convey them
to Oarrollton, where the interment will
take place by the side ot his wife, who
died a few weeks ago.
The throng of people who passed in
line to view the remains continued far
into the night and the line was renewed
early in the morniug. The remains
were escorted to the station by the va
rious military and civil bodies of the
city and by an immense crowd of peo
ple.
Mr. W. 0. George, son of the dead
statesman, has received the following
telegram:
“Washington, Aug. W. To W. O.
George, Jackson, Miss: Telegraphed
you yesterday to Carrollton that com
mittee had been selected and notified.
“The committee selected is as follows:
Senator Walthall, chairman; Bate Tur
ley, McEuery, Pettus, Bacon, Hoar,
Stewart, Proctor; representatives,
Catchings, Richardson, Bankhead,
Wheeler, Carmack, Evans and Gibson.
(Signed) R. T. Wright,
Sergeant-at-Arms U. S. Senate.”
ANOTHER BIG STRIKE ON.
Tboas«nds «>f Men Go Oat nt Honey Grove
District and Trouble Feared.
Hazleton, Pa., Aug. 16 —The mat
ters at the Lehigh and Wilkesbarre col •
liery, in the Honey Grove district, grow
serious. Thirty-five miners went out
for au iucrease in wages, and 2.500 oth
ers joined them. The usually | Jaiet south
side towns are in a state of subdued ex
citemiut. The Italians aud Hungari
ans, the last to go out, are the most ag
gressive and fears are entertained that
they cannot be controlled.
The meu had no organization, but a
branch of the United Mine Workers’ as
sociation was started and 600 men at
once signified their willingness to join..
Chief Organizer Fahey of Pottsville was 1
sent for aud he is expected to be-itfti .
baud before evening. The men held a
meeting iu Mahlahicks halt »jjjpre
decided to make the strike geueraf.'
The entire force of tlie’tom a'biV'' i¥6i/
police, carrying WinchtestororifileS)
on hand to thft iTfiSi
strikers assembled on the hill above the
works at Audenried and a crowd of 300
men marched past l the depdWte te‘»fie
breaker. At a given signal tthfemeti ai :
work left TIWM
hesitating were guarded bv strikers and
tempt to molest tbe men. Interference
have precipitated the riot, as the men,
wdhPddterimW
> i nyro-T'XKi Oilfcaia e
FRQM. <
. The WM
; I Nashville, Aug. 16. The Four
; toentfiv Ohid regihWdt' ■ and
tetfep^whcrtiave ar W
Tennessee CtotennifcT exposition
fpMh.e past week, have returned home.
The weather is very pleasant and ths
attendance nt ' the v good.
Mauy delegates
Lumberdie i gtoii-.ManuraMttferjs’ -Asso
ciation Os Stated hava ar-
rived. ;Th atthe fijpo
isition andh 4»reatlx.j3gisM with the
.exhibit made on-~Xlie migerKr mid ~ for
estry
'ville
to be tlieigreatest
exposition. ’An attradpie
program a
few days| Lettern-Kave ba#na jtoewed
from mahy prominiipt-' Irish- Americans
througha at the dßmntry atjahuncing
their inti ntion of being preseusijat the
celebration of Irish* American daf,.
Sofaool 1.00h.r Shookte*ta Mnv4s««4.:
Galveston, Aug. 16 —Mrs. Kate Gab
lagto,-Jqr;tS; y^iis,'^hotfl’t^er'itf'
this city, 'who livei with 5 ?<
gil. At > Thirteenth and Kt streets,?ihai>:
been_found with her throat out front
ear to ear and the. body charred beyond
After killing her the mur
derer sot fire to the bed. ■■ No arresti:
have, yet been-, made, although the po- *
lice have suspects .under surveillance; >
b j JfJY/ 1 y-i. } .1, VJ ‘
In i j
Savannah, Aug. 16.—About 7 o’clock
a mL' iit the' goYbrnment works bri Ty
bee iilaijd, au etigiue"pushing a flat: oaf
up an. inclined plane to the sand, chut*
equid got> be . stopped by the engineer
and the car wgs ; p.un sred over tim ph use. .
Sig. men wets precipitated 20 feet below.
Five, of were badly, injured and
may.dia mi; ’. ir y -■ t b q dr-
1 Kts«nttr|lle r ick* «»n '
I Aug 16 -r-Tho wholesale
merchants an<i jobbers of Knincville 'are ■
raisihg a big kick now about the' rf’*-
crimm'a^onbi freight rkteMu,Mor,'..iii
NkshvMe and Memph s.< /Twirtyi seven
4>f these ’ iuefijhitq^s’, a’ oom -
plaint With fhs„ r«ijroa<i commission «
and they are. determiuadh to huve.-se--
fief.