LE GITIZEK
Leased Wire Report
Associated Fresa
,VOL.'XXV. NO. 165.
ASHEVILLE, N. O, SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 3, 1909.
PRICE FIVE CENTS.
TAFT FINDS SMG
HELD AS SWINDLER
PROVES RE IS NOT
HAS TEN MILLION
TARIFF BILL CAN
RE PASSED EASILY
T
E
THE ASHE
THE.WEATHXB
- -nT
ROGERS OPENS
LEADERS
DECLARE
ONBALUSTRADEQF
TIDEWATER
ROAD
TO BACKUP COTTON
MI'S I
H SOU
1
11
S
M
SOUTHERN POLICY
Idea of Giving Senators from
' South Voice In Selection
' of Officers not Liked
STANDS ALONE IN HIS
LARGE GENEROSITY
Hitchcock Has Naming, of
Postmasters and He Knows
the Political Game well.
,' -i (By Sheldon 8. Cllne.)
'WASHINGTON, April I. The Taft
program of giving southern senators
and representatives a voice 1n the dis
tribution of federal patronage In the
southern states hasn't yet produced a
wholesale love feast, and there are no
Immediate prospects that a complete
era or good reeling is at hand, rue
program has struck snags this early
in Its career.
It will take time to work out so
radical a change In polity and there
are some pretty sizable obstacles
which will have to be overcome. One
of these Is that Mr. Taft has for his
postmaster general a man who Is fair
ly well acquainted with southern polit
ical conditions, and there is some rea
son to doubt whether Mr. Hitchcock
hares his chiefs views In their en
tirety when It comes to the adminis
tration's policy toward southern ap
pointments. The appointment of post
masters comes directly within Mr.
Hitchcoak's jurisdiction, and he is not
always able to coincide In the recom
mendations of southern senators and
representatives. When ; Mr. Hitch
cock goes to the white house and pre
eenta weighty reasons why this man
or that should or should not be ap
pointed, it hardly would be human if
the president were not influenced by
bis views.
v Against Human Nature.
Human nature aleo plays a part In
the matter from another angle. Borne
of the southern senators and repre
sentatives ' who. have been consulted
regarding appointments have shown,
whether consciously of unconsciously,
awtMSKHnr s-r-ww-wiT"
cat fortunes and the fortunes of the
democratic party In the recommenda
tions they have made. At least, such
Is the view of high administration of
ficials. It goes without saying that Mr.
Tp.ft never intended that patronage
should be so distributed that It would
hlp the democratic and hurt the re
publican party in the southern states.
His hope has been that in at least a
IN FAVDRDF SENATE'S
TARIFFPROPDSITION
Is Assured That Upper
'House Will Not Elimi
, natc Best Features
HOUSE PLAN IS VAGUE
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, April 2. President
Taft was Informed today or the senate
program for the administration of the
new tariff bill. It provides that a
minimum tariff shall apply io all
countries for one year. At the end
of that time the maximum rates will
go Into effect against all countries,
which In the opinion of the president
are not giving the United States their
best tariff rates.
The president Is understood Jo
strongly favor this idea of the appli
cation of the maximum and minimum
principle, and it Is believed that It
will be tho plan finally agreed upon
in the conference that will follow the
passage of the house and senate bills.
The plan of administering the mini
mum and maximum ratns in the
house bill as It now stands Is said to
be more indefinite and less effective
than the one proposed by the senate
finance committee which is framing
the tariff measure to be considered
fcv the senate.
Prior to the cabinet meeting today,
President Taft had a conference with
6enator Aldrich. chairman of the
senate finance committee, and Secre
tary of the Treasury MocVeagh
c .. a Mrlnh mwurcd thai president
that the committee Is making most
aatisfactory progress with the new
bill, and said there would be little or
no delay In taking the matter up in
the senate following a vote in the
bouse.
There have been more of these, ap
parently authentic reports current
-from time to time, to the effect that
the majority of sentiment In the sen
ate was opposed to the minimum and
Wiaxinuira principle M enunciated In
JnTpiyne bill. President Taft ha.
,ot ehered this belief and today ha
received definite assurance as to ne
Correctness of ble position.
Pi ontlnPed " pa"e Slx-'
PRESIDENT TAFT NOW
Sees Grand Climax of His
Life's Work Carried to
Final Completion
HUMORIST FRIEND
GOBBLES APPLAUSE
Crowd Mistakes Distinguish'
ed Man of Letters for
Man of Finance.
(.y Associated Press.)
NORFOLK, Va,. April 2 The
opening of the Virginia railway, ex
tending from Sewell'a Point, Nor
folk, to Deepwater, W. Va., on the
Kanawha river, a distance of 446
miles, took place today with a most
auspicious celebration here, made
more notable by the presence of H.
H. Rogers, who built the Virginian at
a -cost of about $40,000,000; Samuel
M. Clemens (Mark Twain), and sev
eral prominent Now York financiers
interested with Mr. Rogers in tho un
dertaking. The celebration festivities began
with the arrival early in the day of
62 people from along the line of the
new system, on a special train of
twelve coaches and two Pullman cars. .
The day was filled with events of in
terest, the program of entertainment
for the visitors including an inspec-i
tlon of the Norfolk harbor, the new
Virginian coal piers at Sewell's Point,
the largest in the world with a dump
ing capacity Into ship bottoms of 36,-
OOtons per day, and finally, a publlo
reception to Mr. Rogers and his;
guests. Mr. Rogers will be the guest 1
of honor at a $20 per plate banquet
here tomorrow night. 11 '
The Virginian railway, begun in
March 1902, was completed February
17," 1909. More than 1,000,000 acres
of coal lands in West Virginia have
been made accessible , by It and the
road has opened up a country never
before enjoying r ahrdl shrd dluuu
before, enjoying railroad facilities, .
"- Twain Speak. ' .--v--
At the reception at the board of
trade, Mr. Rogers and Mark Twain
shook hands with more than 1,000.
Mark Twain was first in the line and
Mr. Rogers was next. Nearly every
ono mistook Mark Twain for Mr.
Rogers, and as the visitors passed
Mark Twain congratulating him on
the completion of the Virginia railway
(Continued on pag four.)
SUES BEEF TRUST FfiU
DAMAGE IS AMOUNTING
T8 MILLION DOLLARS
Alleged That Trust Nearly
(lot Control of Inde
pendent Concern
STOCK WAS POOLER
NEW YORK, April 2. A suit for
(1,122,000 damages has been brought
against the National Parking Com
pany, a stilwlrtlary of the so-called
Beef Trust, and others, by Indepen
dent butchers of New York. It Is al
leged In the complaint, which has
been filed in the supreme court, that
the trusts Interests obtained secret
control of a company that was sup
posed to be their competitor and
have since dictated Its policy.
The plalntffs are the minority
stockholders of the New York Butch
ers' Dressed Meat Company. This
concern was organised in 1902, when
beef prices reached their highest
point to fight the trust. On 1907
Frederick Joseph became president.
He Is named a-s one of the defen
dants in the present suit. It Is al
leged that Joseph was really acting
for the trust when he acquired con
trol and that his actions as presi
dent ore dictated by the Chicago
packers. The result Is, the complaint
says, that there is no real competi
tion between the supposedly Indepen
dent company and the trust, an dthat
New York city made the victim of a
monopoly.
The complaint deals with some of
the matters which came out recently
in trial of the suit of Joseph against
Sulzberger. On the witness stand
Joseph testified in regard to a con
tract which he made In 104 to sell
to Edward Tllden, president of the
National Packing Company. 4,875
shares of the stock of the Bchwara
rhild ft Sulzberger Company. It was
in this way that the trust came near
getting control of the "8. S." Later
however, the majority stock of this
company was put into a trusteeship
to make aure that the trust should
not, by any chance, obtain the con
trol. , ; " v u i
Even Name Date for Its Final
Passage In Spite of
Hostility to it
PUBLIC IS TIRED OF
T1RES0M DISCUSSION
Little Interest Is Shown
Either on Floor or In
Galleries of House.
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, April . The re-
publican leaders of the house ex
pressed themselves today as absolute
ly confident of being able to pass the
tariff bill whenever they decide to put
It upon its passage. This conclusion
is the result of a careful canvass.
The announcement was confidently
made that they -would have sufficient
strength to vote down a motion by
the democrats to recommit tho bill,
with instructions, which, will bo the
teat. The final vote, it Is believed,'
will bo reached next 'week, possibly
on April 1. ,
That the Payne bill was filled with'
riotous Imperfections, was a false
pretense, was designed to cover up
the extravagances of the republican
administration, that it did not redeem
party pledges, and that It sounded
the death knell of the dominant party,
were soma of the criticisms paused
upon the measure by the democrats
In the house today.
Debate Continue.
An interesting feature of the de
bate was the speech of Pablo Ocampo
Do Leon, the Philippine commissioner
who attacked the provision for free
trade with the Philippine lalanda
From the far south exactly opposite
views were expressed regarding pro
tection, Mr. Ransdell, of Louisiana,
pleading for it oa behalf of the In
dustrles of, hl atate,,whyftMr, JBptgtjt,
of Mississippi, and Mr. Clayton, of
Alabama, wanted free lumber, hides,
boots, shoes, bagging and cotton ties.
The speech of Mr. Clayton was of
considerable length and he engaged In
several heated colloquies with mem
ber; on the republican side.
From the republicans came sugges
tions of a permanent tariff commis
sion, and while all of them supported
(Continued on page Six.)
TEDDY AT GIBBALTEfl
DENIES STORIES OF THE
ATTEMPT! HIS LIFE
Says . An Idiotic Italian
"Sassed" Him While
lie Was on Bridge
MARKS SHORT STOPS
(By Associated Press-)
OIBKAITAlt, April 2. The Bteatn-
er Ilamlmrg with Theodore -Roosevelt
and the members of his party on
Iw.ard came into (JibraltiT a few
minutes before o'clock this morn
ing. Mr. Roosevelt came ashore with
Richard L. Sprague, the American
consul, and an aide do camp of Gen
eral Sir Frederick I'orestler-Walkcr,
governor of Gibraltar. Accompanied
by the governor, on aide, inil Mr.
Sprague, Mr. Hoosevelt drov In the
governor's carriage out along the
north tfront and up to tho limit of
British territory.
Mr. Sprague and Mr. Roosevelt
then drove back to the pier, whence
Mr. Roosevelt went off to th' Ham
burg shnrtly after half past eleven.
The dock was rrowdefl with people.
who gave Mr. Roosevelt an enthusluji
tlc farewell. The Hamburg sailed
for Naples at 12.20 o'clock. Mr.
Koosew-H refused to be protographed
and declined every request for an in
terview. Last night at a dance on the Ham
burg, Mr. Roosevelt danced with Mif
Ruth Draper. Before withdrawing
for the night Mr. Roosevelt appear.!
in the smoking room and cbatted
with the passengers for twenty min
utes. When asked directly concern
ing the rumor that an attack had
'been made upon him during th ;
voyage. Mr. Roosevelt said that th
only basis for It was that an "Idiotic,
excitable Italian" used angry expres
sions to him while he was on the
bridge of the vessel talking to the
captain. He said this man made no
attempt upon him whatever and tha;
he was promptly removed and con
fined below the remainder of the
voyage.
STAPLES, April 2. The German
steamship agents here announce that
the Hamburg which Is due Sunday
wilt not srrive at Naples unflKMon
day, owing to bad weather.
:! PANlKTj J.
Ono Time King Jn Cotton Market.
i . cm piuv
YORK LIFE WILL
GUT DOWN ITS FORCE
Thousand Agents Will Have
to Walk Line Because of
Court's Decision
i
NEW YORK. April 1 As a result
of the limitation placed upon new
business of life insurance companies
by the insurance law, th New York
Life, Insurance Com pany, It waa an
nounced today,' will on Hay 31 dis
charge 1,00 . of its agents in various
parts of the .country. The dismissal
order which , will, affect , agents who
devote 'only partvof their Urn to th
the decision rendered yesterday
Supremo Court Justice O'Gormnn, up
holding the constitutionality of that
section of the Insurance law which
limits new business to be written by
any company In any calendar year to
(160,000,000. Justice O'Gornuui's
decision forbade the company from
Issuing a $25,00 policy on the ground
that Its limit for new business for
the year had been reached and could
not bo exceeded.
Edward It. Perkins, second vice
president of the New York Life In
surance Company said tonight that In
the last two years more than 5,000
life Insurance agents have lost their
positions. Another 1,000 would have
to go by Mayy 31, thug bringing u
force which once numbered 8,000
down to 2,000.
ATTEMPTS TO KILL
WIFE IN CHILDBED
Prominent Resident of M"
Dowell County Slashes
Throat While She is 111
Special to Th Citizen )
MARION, N. '.. April 2 - Willie
his wife, lying ill 111 bed wllh her ten
days-old hnliy. liwrenee Cmlcy, a
prominent refi'l' nt who lives al'out
three miles from her.- all. roped lo
kill her by ulir-liing her throat, with
a razor. Mrs. f'onley wii Lady cut.
hut may recover. The c hild was not
hurt.
Physlelfins and officers were sum
moned at once, hut Conley escaped,
and up to t'his time has not been cap
tured, f'onley has always been re
garded as a !' '-able citizen, anil no
motive can lie ;iscrilcd for lili rath
act. Mrs. Coiil. v was a Miss Carpcn
Ing and comes of a prominent family.
tllAIXlM Il AT WKI.DOX.
RICHMOND. Va., April 2.- John
Armstrong t'h.iloner Is visiting fri nd
near Weldfui. N. C. recuperating
from an atark of acute Indigestion
following the tragic events of the
night of March 15, when Mr. c'halon
er killed a farm employe at his houi
Merry Mills. Cobham, Va., while de
fending the wife of the latter from
an assault y ic r husban
WASHINGTON, AprllJ. The Pore-
cast for North Carolina: Fair Satur
day and Sunday, moderate northwest
winds becoming variable.
MJIXY :
Now ProituiUT of Plan to Save Grow.
n mmy. - i ; , s .
TO
- GET VALUABLE PURSE
1 ..!-:... .
Star Sprinters From All
. Over World Will Compete
in Great Race Today v
NKW YQHK, April . Blx of the
greatest lung distance runners In the
world, each representative of his na
tlon ,tww start in the Marathon derby
at I p. m., at the polo O rounds to
morrow. Johnny Hayes, Alfred
Bhrubb, Thomas Longboat, Dofando
Pietrl, Matthew Maloney and Henri
Styves. i '. vt..' 5 ;'' ;: i-i ; f
v Each of these men ha a record o
be porud of, but the best at all lor
thoaistaneCas to lima fs thtef
Henri Htyvns. lie madthn fllstanflu
In a race In London on December 18
Inst, In two horns, thirty-one minutes
and twenty-three seconds. The bet
ting on the race. It Is said, In sporting
circles, has been rather heavy. Long
boat rules the favorite at 7 to 6 with
Dorando next In favor at B to S.
The prize the men will compete
for is 110,000 in cash, divided Into
four purses of 15.000. $2,600, 11,500
and 11,000, This Is the richest purs
ever hung up for a similar event In
this or any other country and will
spur ever yman to his best effort.
The stands will seat 40,000 people
and that every seat will be taken. If
tho weather is kind, has been Indi
cated by the public Interest la the
contost.
DEFENSE INDICATES
LINE OF EVIDENCE
Will Try'fo Prove That Rel
ative of Preeland Family
is (Juilty of Murder
(Ity A-H.H luted Press.)
A.MITK t'lTV, l.a., Aj.i II 2. "We
will not only produce th. ten gauge
dot gull used In klllliiK J. O. Ilreo
hind, bis wife, and st. p-dnught r, but
ad will show In court who killed
them."
Koch was tho declaration toils v of
counsel for Avery Hlount charged with
the asHasMlnatlori of the Dreeland fam
ily and now being tried on one Indict
ment alleging the murder of the man.
Tills announcement coupled with evl
dere e Introduced by the defeiot. , In-
ll at. s that an attempt is to b- made
by Blownl's lawyers to shift lie- re
sponsibility of the crime to a relative
of III. Hint's, who disappeared from his
home near Tli lifaw on the day of th
murder and who has not bi-. n kc. n or
heard from since.
MORNINGSTAR LANDS
BILLIARD TOURNEY
(Hy Associated Pre.)
NKW YORK, April 2.- "ra C.
MorningHtai . of this city. Is th new
world's champion nt IS.i-halk line bil
liard, having won the honor by de
feating C-orge V. Slosson In tho final
game of the international tournament
at the Madison Kuare rjarden con
cert hall tonight, scorn r0 to JI4.
Mornlngstar Is thirty-four years old.
He distinguished himself In this tour
nament by scoring a victory In every
one of his six games, lie gets a Cash
prism of $1.2, and forty per cent of
the gate receipts and entry money.
George Sutton, of Chicago, gets sec
ond prlie. twenty-five per cent of the
money, Oeorge R Slosson. of New
York, and A. O." Cutler, of Boston,
tied for third place and divided
twenty-serea per cent. Louis Cure of
Paris, champion France, will re
ceive the remainder. 4 : '
Boston Officers clear Air.
Folwer of Charge and Ad
mit Mistaken Identity
AUGUSTA POLICE
MADE BAD MISTAKE
Chief May Be Liable for De
tention of Man in Common
Cell for Days.
(By Associated Press.)
AUGUSTA, oa., April t.Offlcsrs
from Boston who arrived this morning
declared W. W. Fowler, who has been
under arrest here, waa not W. - TX
Owen, former congressman from In-,
illana, who la wanted In Boston on
charges of fraud. Fowler waa at ono
released, . . v
Inspector A. C, Armstrong, of the
iioston bureau of criminal investiga
tlon, and A. F. Luther, a former em
ploye of owen, were the Boston men
who aaw Fowler, Luther said th
prisoner waa not Owan, .Luthur said
he worked-for Owen alx months and
knew him Intimately. Inspector Arm.
strong said that Mr. Fowler looked
very much Ilka Owen, and that it
would require personal acquaintance
to say ha waa not Owen. Fowler's
attorney here denounced the keeping
of his client In the common ceils at
police headquarters as a "damnable
outrage." Tha only legal recourse
Fowler has is to sua tha chief of po
lice individually, Ha cannot sua the
city,"''
Mr, Fowler la said to be suffering
frara glaucoma. An Immediate opera
tion to save hi sight waa declared
necessary and ha waa taken to a hos
pital soon after he waa released. ;
' ' Wildcat SlMmo. '
William D. Owen, who la Milt want
ed by tha Boaton police waa tha head
of tha tlbsro and other' Mexican bub
bles that burst In the early spring of
10B. He was secretary of state. ol
Indjana from to 1889, Ho had
appeared In publlo Ufa a a' tnlnlstnr
MUtba wM.HIa,.ortoflal ability
had introduced him to tha political
arena, and in lifts ha waa elected to
congress front tha old tenth district.
and ha held his seat through the
forty-ninth, fiftieth and fifty-first con
gresses. He waa later appointed com
mlssionor of immigration.
When Owen was a member of eon
great and later when ha waa com
misalonar of Immigration ha fell In
with some Mexican promoters at
Washington and they pictured to him
tha glowing possibilities of coffee and
rubber business In Mexico. Owan
bought about five thousand acres of
Jungle near Tohuantepoc. This tract
waa located about the middle of the
Isthmus and at the time of tha pur
chase waa almost Inaccessible so that
that land cost Owen practically noth
ing. But he found that a railroad was
to be built and this would place tha
land within reach and Owen told of a
tcheme to make money out of It.
Tho Origin of the Companies.
After Owen became secretary of the
Hate of Indiana he took Nat U. Hill,
who was later treasurer of the stato:
U. Z. Wiley. A. C. Dally and W. I. Over
street, the last named of Terre Haute,
down to view the land. A number of
neoplo were down there who explain
ed the fortune that could b made In
the cultivation of coffee, rubber, pine
apples and other tropica crops. When
the party returned to Indiana the Mix-
lean Coffee and Hubbcr company was
organised with Owen as president.
Vumerotis other corporations of vari
ous names and entangled relationships
rrew out of this original enterprise.
Including the various 1 1 hero concerns.
prominent among those lielng an In-1
liana company and Ubero companies;
with headqtisrters at Huston.
The first crash came through a Mos-
lon company, when stockholders at
tached the funds In the elaborate of
fice of that company, at 89 Htate
srxrVTJVtiUtru"ur i1 '"Ir" " - sssasasas
(Continued on page BlxJ
Invalid Clirl Who Wrote io
Cliocr Soldiers in Field
Wcdn at 65
(Sneelaf te Th Cltlxen.)
CHICAOO. April it. liters writ
en by a tender-hearted Invalid girl
luring the civil war to cheer the
Sieart of a wounded soldier she had
never seen form the foundation of a
romance which has found Its culmina
tion after many years.
The climax comes In a wedding at
Oak Park, the contracting parties be
ing Mrs. Alsellne Ounn, a widow,
writer of the letters, and Capt, Selden
M. French, of Denver, who received
them. The captain la 67 years .old,
his bride 5.
When a youth of If Oapt. French
tolned the Twelfth Iowa regiment and
went away to the war. Mrs, Ounn,
then a girl of 11, waa an Invalid, con
fined to her home in a email Iowa
t (Continued on page Six.)
Solly Plans to Give Farmers
ol South Chance to Borrow
Money on Crop
IT WOULD MEAN BIO
SAVING TO GROWER
Southern Investors will Have
Chance to Get In on :
the Enterprise.; 1
(By Aaanclated Press.) '
ATLANTA.' Oa., prll I. "WbeB
tha farmers of tha South and tha
business men of tha South' say ens .
word, funds will be Immediately avail
able insufficient volume' ts fortver'
place tha great , industry of cotton
production ttpon a stable foundation,
free from tha chanca fluctuation of
the market, relieved of tha attacks
of manipulators and leaving tha gi
gantic crop monopoly of this action
to respond, unembarrassed and unre
stricted, to the legitimate lawi of sup
ply and demand, t The result thou! t
mean to the Houth en annuel cash
saving ranging from 1160,000,001 to
la&o.eoo.ooo." '
In these plain terme Daniel I, Sully,
the man who drove cotton to He
highest market price since the Civil
war, today outlined th purposes of
hla visit to Atlanta and the South,
Continuing. Mr. sully eald fata plan
contemplated, "the creation of an Ini.
pregnable system which shall do away
with the annual necessity of the far
mer aacrincln. mil I lone of batee of
cotton for pressing debt, congesting
the, market, hammering down prices,
upsetting the reign of supply and de
mand "and losing to this section the
tremendous sums, that are It due In
return for th one crop tndlspemtlblo
to the needs of civilisation. ... -'.'v.
' ' line Ten Millions Heady.
t do not ask one penny fromi the
Southern people, I do not ask the
pledging of .on bate of cotton until
I nave given ample good faith of
sufficient financial backing, from
source that are unquestionably to
carry every oeisn 01 tn pian inio :..
effect and t safeguard the Interest
of every farmer In the South,, from
the men who raises one bale to the
man who raise a thousand bale ,
"A minimum fund of $tMe,00
subscribed by the moat conservative
financier wf the United State I
available io be Invested In suoh iron
clad securities a shall Insure the
ability and responsibility of the plane
of promoter to redeem their promise
and obligation to the last detail.
"The people of (he South will be
given the first opportunity to Invest
in this project, If upon rigid Investi
gation It commend ltelf to their
Judgment
flonnVd Wsrehonsee.
'The backbone of the plan I
chain of bonded warehouse through
out th South, sufficient In number
and capacity to house one-third of the
crop and that orve-thlrd, e ha been
demonstrated, will be the balance of
power which wilt render market eon
dltlnns Impossible and Insure the die-'
posal of the crop In strict conformity
with the taws of supply and demand."
In borrowing money on hi ware
house certificate; Mr. Sully eald, the
farmer doe not surrended this equity
In hi cotton. "It I nl to sell when
ever he please or to hold a long
as be pleases, with the plain business
exception that tha certificate ha may
have used a collateral for th loan
In a prior lien upon the bale which
must he satisfied out of the sale of the
bale when that culmination I reached.
The company would be paid a nom
inal fee for each bale of cotton hand
led and In this way. Mr. Sully figure
a fair profit will be realised on the
investment.
SUGAR TRUST MUST
PAlfOVEfl MILLION
Import Duties on Sugar
Drought in Fraudulently
Assessed by Loeb
NKW yotlK, April t. Re-eases,
ments of duties amounting to a total
increase of 11,289,000 on sugar Im
ported by the American Sugar Refin
ing company at the refinery of Have
meyer and Eider, between December,
101, and November. 1(07, have been
ordered by Collector Loeb, of the Port
of New York. Mr. Loeb ordered thl
liquidation of the duties on the ground
of fraud.
The increased assessments is a re
sult of the -trial of the ease of the :
government against the American Su
gar Refining company, which waa re
cently tried here, in which the gov
ernment waa awarded flJt.OOQ.
Kx-Unlted State Attorney Stlmson
and Assistant District Attorney Dennl
son, who prosecuted the previous case,
have been retained by th department .
of Justice, special counsel to carry
on further Miration of siu-.i.!ar na-