The evening world. Newspaper, March 4, 1909, Page 3

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_— .___. AFT PLEDGES IMS 0 ROUSEVELT POLICI A NV INMUGURAL ADDRESS | ¥ ; ee] Declares for Clear Laws Governing Corporations, a Fair Tariff Revision and Discusses Labor and Japanese Questions. President Willlam Howard ‘Taft de- {t be impossible to do so by import Mvered his inaugural address at Wash-| duties, new kinds of taxation must be ath teary a4 Giisen adopted, and among these I recommend @ graduated inheritance tax, a6 c In principle and as certain and ers: takes the oath eae Just taken must | collection.” feel a heavy welght of responsibility,| President Taft commended economy, “My Fellow Citizens: Any one who If not, he has no conception of the| ‘SPeclally in the face of a national deficit, but deplored any tendency Powers and duties of the office upon! out down Reino intlene which, aa which he 1s about to enter, or he is| really needed to make government ef- lacking in q proper sense of the obii-| fctlve. He spoke of the Increasing CoMlnD Chl (io ccath teeee burdens modern scence and business development have placed upon the De- partment of Agriculture and those con- ® | nected with transportation oversight | and regulation and of the necessl | deepening and increasing our water- | ways In the Mississipp! and Ohio val- “The office of an inaugural address fs to give a summary outline of the main policies of the new admint tion, so far as they can be anticipated I have had the honor to he one of the @dvisers of my distingulshed prede- e@ssor, and as such, to hold up his hands ) the reforms he has Initiated Z shoud be untrue to myself, to my promises and to the declarations of th. party platform upon which I was elect: Canal. Continuing, he said | “Thon, too, there are expenditures of Bovernment absolutely necessary if our country is to maintain {ts proper place ed to office, if T did not make the main: / to exercise 1 tenance and enforcement of thoue re- proper Influence in de- Loree policy against the colonization of Eu- ey were directed to the stppres:| ropean monarchies in this hemisphere, sion of the lawlessness and abuses ot} and in th : ja in the promotion of peace and in- Power of the great combinations of! ternational morality. I refer to the capital invested in railroads and in in- {CSC of maintaining a proper army, dustrial enterprisés carrying on inter- } pr nen inavy and sultable fortificat ses | Upon the mainland of the United Stat state commerce, The steps which my} and in its dependencies.” predecessor took and the legislation | ee Het Hite it Ninvenute: defenses nadequate both ASS e4! is reco! endatio have a passed on his recommendation have, ment and mene thank oath ‘complished much, have caused a gen-/and that it ts absolutely 3 that t a era} halt In the vicious policies whieh created popular alarm, : brought about in the business e nucleus of BP ravescla cee @ much higher regard for existing law, | of hens, praised Mr. Roosevelt's ri ork of reinvigorati he d To Make Reforms Lasting, + {urged the continuance of. the nracutat e 5 @ Of the likelihood of war the. Pre: “Te render the reforms lasting, how: dent said: res! ever, and to pecure at the same me) “Our international policy ts alwa, . freedom from alarm on tie part of $9, Promote peace,. Wo shall tate into any war with a full consciousn: th appropriations ning be be put in those pur: business m and executive action are Rel oy Hef of the ra!lroads from certain re- honor and. the b strictions of the anti-trust law have been urged by my predecessor and will be urged by me On the other hana, | ague Ra and arbitration (tress the Administration {6 pledged to legis-| international controversies, in Nerden Gy Jation looking to a proper federal su-| maintain peace and to avold war, | a .| “But we should be blind pervision and restriction (o prevent ex-| conditions, and. should aloweourieliee cestive issues of bonds an! stocks bY) to become foolish Idealists, if we did not ng proper and progressive | of the awful thods, further legislative | ways entall not, and wi ons it to avoid 9 resort to arms, wW. ry instrumentality, like that Cot leys, and of completing the Panama | among the nations of the world, and is! | fense of its own trade Interests, In the! ! | companies owning and operating Inter-| realize that with all the nations In the! * world armed and prevared for war, we state commerce railroads | must be ourselves in’ a. similar ‘con. The President said that there muat bo dition, in order to prevent other nations & reorganization of the Interstate Com- Srey teeing advantage of us’ and of | our ability merce Commission, the Department of /Onh Aunty, t0 defend our Interests Commerce and Labor and the Depart.) bands ment of Justice to make these reforms | n the jnternational controversies that are likely to aris h effective, and that he hoped to make| growing out of the mlecilen oetheronan certain suggestions to Congress regard-| door and other issues, the United States resent anti-trust | Can Maintain her interests intact and tne amendementes to) D | can secure respect for her just de- and interstate commerce lawa which/ mands. She will not be able to do $0, would make the reforms fair and rea-| however, if it Is understood that sne 4 never intends tp back up her asse: sonable, He continued: ofhrlghte andiheradetensemat “It is believed that with. the changes! terest by anything but mere verbal to be recommended, American business | pratest and diplomatte note, . sons, the expenses of can be assured of that measure of|the army and navy and of coast de stability and certainty In respect to fenses should always be considered as something which the Government must those things that may be done and par or and they should not be cut ot those that are prohibited, which 18 ¢8-) through mere consideration of economy. gential to the life and growth of all/Our Government Is able to afford a suit- Bulga , {able army and a suitable navy It may us 5 maintain them without the slightest “Buch a plan must include the right |danger to the Republic or the cause of of the people to avail themselves of free institutions, and fear of additional taxation ought not to change a propar those method of combining capital | oticy IMREMARTeRATCIane 6 @ Prope: and effort deemed necessary to reach ; the highest degree of economto ef-| |... Te saeatene cue ene ¢ very effort to pre- ficiency, at the same time differenti | van: humiliating. and. degrading ore: ating between combinations based) bition against any of our citizens wish- itimate economic reasons and jg temporarily to sojourn in foreign pon ee countries because of race or religion.” our rights with @ strong fo: o 4 fo bh ris a most important feature of my| maintenance of traditional American | p those formed with the intent of ore) ascing to the subject of Japanese im- | ating monopolies and artificially con-/ migration, President Taft said: “Tho admiasion of Asiatic immigrants CATG aeD : who cannot be amalgamated with our Revision of the Tariff. population has been mado the subject “The work of formulating Into Dractl; | Lepete cle BTCh AN Fry clauses, in our cal shape such changes is creative Work; minietrative regulation secured by of the highest order, and requires all ;diplomatio negotiation, & eroly the deliberation possible In the interval. pene saat Keane Conbin ne) (0 mini- I belleve that the amendments to be guch immigration withont un: ary proposed are just as necessary In the friction and by mutue! cone tween protection of legitimate business as In| sfeantime, we nst take every pre. the clinching of the reforms which /oaution to prevent, or, failing that, to | ter conditions so punish outbursts of ace feeling suffrage as a pr r people against foreignors |its exercise again properly bear the name of my pre-|Pumlen decessor. of whatever national y who hi “A matter of most pressing impor-jour grant a troaty right to < accordance with the promises of the [$¢cted SBainat lawiezk Gaseni: or in- shall call Congress into extra session, | tr mediate necessity for laws which to meet on the 13th day of March, in| would give to the general government, | It n order that consideration may be at once| which was responsible for treaty obliga- Biven to a bill revis: the Dingiey Act. session tariff legislation, President Taft| put us to the risk of serious foreign aid it 1s held that there has been| ¥ ars puch’ a change of conditions since the For Postal Savings Banks. passing of the Dingley act that a read- Justment is nqceaaary to preserve to all | tong, except that the President hop-d forms of industy, whetrer of the fac-/ that the report of the Monetary Com- tory, farm or mine, a protection equal| mission would ald Congress in the mat- to the difference between the cost of|'fr., ineoming Congress should | nce’ . Production here and abrogs, and to in. romptly fulflll the promise of thel/only note in his address which w. clude a reciprocity provistos Republican platform and pass a proper avings Bank bill,” said the ia an embarrassment to the orderly} excessive paternalism. . . . It will fur- progress of all our businesses, the Pres{-| nish the absolute pecurity SUT) against the dant suggested that thé swittest and | Pyarinty. of bank deposits 60 alluring, | may well the proposed scheme 0 most satisfactory result will be attained | without Its pernicious results,” by cor sidering no other legislation at she President urged the Incoming em SCA Bar eauon: of commerce, particularly with mi New Kinds of Taxation, Central and South America and the Philip |noran@ electorate has t lin the we |their hope on |ness sticcess, 4 | | statutes of State platform upon which I was elected, 1|” ‘The President went on to say that tions for el this consideration led to a mention of | of comp tions to enforce them, rather than. to | city and State governments, Possible that laws t n regard to the nature of the extra] failures of justice due to local prejudice from v« 2 | proved to. be a a‘ tance {s the revision of the tariff, In|Jawful business here and to be pro-|!s the Fitteenth already good f South and the other ling between th sections of the country, My chief pumpose is not to @ effect a change in the electoral of the Southern States, That is a ondary consideration. Wha‘ forward to is an increase in ee of political views of it I look the tole all king md their advocacy throughout the South, and the existence of a respect- able ‘political opposition Btato; even more tanh this, peo} ment is their Governmént, its officers in theis States cannot, ho without reference to the negr progress and Its present ¢c nth Amendment se due process of law, protectior erty and the pursuit of happ' the Fifteenth Amendment att secure the negro a tion of the privilege to vote, t was a negro. The Thirteenth teenth Amendments have been gener. ally enforced, and have secur jets for which they were While the Fifteenth Amend inst any d ia to an in a that ar H ideration of this question er, be complete and full ‘o race, its dition, The red them n of prop: iness, and empted to heci and Pour. ed the ob- intended, ment has THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAROH 4, 1909, ‘New Mistress of the White House and Members of the Tatt Family; , Vice-President Sherman, His Wite and the Sherman Children the Fourteenth Amendment | not been generally observed in the past, | it ought to be observed, anc dency of Southern legislation toward the enactment of elecc fications which shall square 1 the ten- 0 quali- with that amendment Of course, the mere nal la tio adoption of a constituth in the right dir yoand ju In time beth will come. H by constitutional la prever shall exclude from voting both and whites pot having” edu other quali policy should be pursued tly enforced a tions thought to y for a proper electorate, and this aw is only n. It must well it is jen to all that the domination of an , irresponsible. elemen: can be aws Whi or nec- Danger Has Passed. “The danger of the control refo Inter n white cl With this many of t creased. The colored men 1 ts of thrift weil ‘as upo rt symp ve from their wi industry, self-r tte Northerners wh negro in his ne ive t d uth allure. Wha Amendmen Constitution and the right pecifying ubjected t ment of the ‘at protection to iI) be repeaied, an. ought to be repealed.” The President went on to his is a ne same tern: and whites on * » the 1th A inconsistent wt of an re passed. est which tizens take of the negroes has in- must base their own and busi- to-day is | { n the ald | which they neighbors a time when hized with the rugele for bet- o him the to enforce i tle t rem: nt tot to have qualifica- ‘o the test hat amendment, the negr a itn point out prevent Illiterate persons g which excluded negroes § was not | mendment land was tn the direction of good gov- Banking and monetary reforms were a silinulus to the pe mentioned without definite recommenda. | yet fitted for the ballot. ernment, It was at once a ple who Negro Appointment: ssing to the question of boldly and openly hostile in tts of the Roosevelt administrat curb and were not negro of- holders President Taft soundeg the 8 criticism fon, Speaking of negroes, he sald: *Encoun is 1, subjected at ave our profound and ald in the strucele they ing. We are char with, t race feeling times to e growing out of It, they sympathy are mak- he sacred ss to be allve to the develop: duty of making thelr path as smooch and easy as we can, Any recognition of their distinguished men, ines. He advocated the use of poiniment to office from among t He then Indicated a suggestion for| mai) subsidies to encourage the estab-| number, Is properiy taken conservatism in tariff scaling in these of direct steamship Ine words; “ The~fixing of the Panami In the making of a taritt bill the] yang in favor of the look prime motive {8 taxation, and the|earnostly upheld. The Prestdent said securing thereby of a revenue. Due] that the Canal will be finished early \ largely to “the business deprosaion | im the next administration, if not be fore. which followed the financial panie of f The governments. of* the island ¢ ve! 1907, the revenue from customs and|pendencies, Porto Rico and the Philin- \ wh to such | Pines, 18 warmly cominended, The Derecamnicer (en iuecrenses pausing of the bit removing rostric- ~ an extent that the expenditures for the! Hony on our trade with the Philippino: |e current fiscal year will exceed the re-) will greatiy ‘stimulate trade In the eotpts by $100,000,000. It is impera-| United States and the Istands. five that such a deficit shall not con- To Break Solid South. tinue, and the framers of tho tarif€} Pho President then took up the mat- bill must, of course, have In mind @he} ter the reuniting In sentiment of total juced | North and South, approaching the mat- it bp ie Mamaia i Fe ores to] ter, with a frankness and directness | by It and so arrange the duties 08 tol new to inaugural addresses: torite anfsadeanste fnecme, Should ~ “7 tok with hove to increasing the s|couragement, and an appre thelr progi be pursued. “But it may well a in the ° appointment is like! erefore, the Bxecutive, in the negro race b; ist mercise a any a an lation of 34, and this Just polfey shall thereby to do it more harm than Gate ctaee peat re mamey ne ey jo exiconrage the mere 0: race Seetiae ee im the in. terest of individual ambition,” r fumes on Italian ahd Stellan brigand- | where the tribute should be paid. His | L jase; histories of famous brigand chiefs; | yiotims went out in force to meet him. | | }a full exposition of the methods of the jraigned by the policeman on a charge peared. She sald that Leldig had to fit | her’ not to app: bet c yy by “ante BLACKHAND CHEF» es the Black Hand There was one vol f} ume on hom various Black Hand bands i had terrorized merchants in the Argen- | tine Republic. There were pamphlets on the Brazilian Black Hand, hundyveds of 8 of Blick- - i a handers fi w York, Body Found ai Cemetery Gate Citeaso ana roan cities ‘ Be pe ae There were sample letters of Black Identified as That of Hand threats > Here 4s certainty enough testimony | Francesco Abate, to cons:ruct the preriise that young | was profoundly interested in| der methods of Comorist! black- | ail, An inquiry into the career of \bate since ‘ coe clipplngs on the w CHARLES TA Comvmiduy PREM SROs 1998 © | Francesco Abate, the young man who ! ie took up his residence st New York furnished otner | threads for the weaving of Vachris's| last Tuesday night, was a Black | theory, uy entrance to the was murdered near t in ———— | Accacia Cemetery in Ozone Park, Le Ly ned all Mr, Taft di ibis own Te "Gander. Ample evidence to. substan- He Never Worked | eclitito labor tlate the fact was found tn his)reoma at} 1 ue wing months he lived at No.) COD — resident ‘Taft referred to ex-Presi- No, 105 Sackman street, East New York, / 135° gackman street ho had neta | tug Rescue for help. ‘The tug was un- dent Roosevelt's accomptisinients | co.gay, instead of being the vietimn of worked. Yet he was always Iiberalty | 204 (© put out, owing to the heavy i the employees of interstate curlers IN| @ plot ho was a plotter folled, supplied with money. Hefore he came | £2"% But lbnaley Giatigns eae uld | Shopping days become les thelr right to recover damages du for the regulation of ¢ or in the District or Col the arbitration of interstate Inbor disputes and the compu terstate railways to put in use, He pledged carry on the policy indicated to Sackman street Black Hand threats were unknown in that neighborhood Colneldent with his arrival there be- of! offers the following plausible theory to) gan a clrculation of blackmailing i threats, Bombs were promised thowe | *te1m In case who did not pay tribute, and Vachria| > barkentine trying—it drives away fatigue White Rose | Antonio Vachris, chief of the Italian The battleships Rhode Island and Kan- sas, off Tompkinsyille, had all thelr Janchors out and kept up a full head of nehors fatled toh 1 nd a schooner dragged a {detective bureau of Brooklyn Borough, Set to| solve the slaying of the good-looking, e * tent ® | danditied young man who'never worked: laws. belleves that tribute was pald—that it {thelr anchors off Clifton and fouled Labor Injunctions. | Maying threatened the lives of certain | was paid to Abate in person and to nis{ THY set signals for help, but the seas ion , Te ' As to the repeal of the laws regird-| merchants In East New York in case | agents. kept relief tugs back, A barkentine ey a ng Injunctions against labo: he sad | rhe anchored off the Municipal y at S " Di the har-| The youth—he was only twenty- . P FY at dt “another labor question has arisen| they failed to pay tribute, the uyatwenly four, las ea dragged anchordurina the morte which has awakened the most excited) |. inal ontrivel trap. | blossomed forth in tine raiment, He 5 Giscnssion.. ‘That is in respect to the essed merchants contrived @ TAP) tien in hls neighbor. |! and called for atd power of the Federal courts to issue They notified Abate that they would ocdmEraratrt ia cutter Sen and eight sailing vessels Injunctions in inaustrial disputes, “Aw set yieiemands for tribute, ‘They |N20d- He surrounded himself with an |p New Brigiton hut ull thele anchors : | alr of mystery that made him doubly |down to keep from dragging, but some to that, my convictions are fixed. Take r ‘ yy away from courts, if It could be taken agreed to meet him at the cometery | interesting. Some of tho shrewder|of the vessels drifted in spite of them | merchants who were paying small itsno injunctions in’ gate Tuesday night. He went there with utes, and it would create ao. without confederates, class among the laborers sums of tribute from month to month Hae eeveaimorenn ey Rie Left Weapons as Warning. | hegan to penetrate the thin disguise able to all men for the protection of lls Intended victims were there, and) of the sleek and olly young black- their business against lawless inva- | fell upon him with knives and axes. ae mailer, The young upstart had the stone Jaxe, an Ice-pick and a Knife lay beslde | ynutterable chek (o come into their a Ree A AnIGEY rene GH Ms net his body as an eloquent warning to men homes and flirt with their wives and be protected by equitable injuneti ne of his ilk of the sort of tribute certain | gaugnters, showering prevents upon | SETS rarity ee a Erte eee them bought with the money extorted | linked with one to make the se ing to pa 0 » | by Black Hand threats | boyeott lawful, oh a proposition Kidnapping 4 traditional methods ot} uhatenweslarthemiisituation iaeaala vaenea Sa Teeth SH Black Hand assassination. yy [Wachris to-day, “that drove the vietims when submitted to the 4 1 The murdered man was identined ts of Abate to plot his death, They got) Ceo aia a Tee neler ree eeteast uncle, A guard | oeether in the matter aud arranged the | ment of tyranny, and ought n wus put upon his rooms and Salvatore | io)” mney figured out that in killing | De ee hacu dca) tamporary reat Rawoitch, a young. man who had ing order without noticr roomed with him, placed under sur Instances been abused by yeillance. Vachris to-day ransacked ate ex and to remedy this pant platform u which I was élected rece Abate's effects Bmmends the formulation in a stitute The police of this city have never of the conditions under found so complete a library of what tate, Asstatute ean might be specitled as Black Hand ed to embody t literature as that found among the be- med t ctice, & & * American p longings of Abate. There were scores Dee OU Ea * | of books and pamphlets on how to make Working Out the Plot. | The President closed by bombs, some written in Itallan and) “with all this matter on hand it ts! mpathy some in French, There were treaties on not dificult. to figure out how that citizens an a dynamite, its manufacture and methods young dandy came to his death, From i a eae ami f an young t 0 the piechatee for its employment for destructive pur-! month t CRI eM Incrantad wh lamaee ——_————_ | po mands. Finally he named a large sum T there were half a dozen vol-|/and named the cemetery as the place Revenue A 10c, Package makes 40 Cups, Some Dressmakers , Say: “The colors this Spring are beautiful, but hard to match,” We say, and we know whereof we speak—‘‘Easy to match if you use Corticelli him off they would rid themselves of jan unbearable burden. I haye talked | | with some merchants In the vicinity and | obtained Black Hand letters that I feel | sure are in Abate’s handwriting. In aj day or 80 we Will be able to make sure by comparisons with specimens found | in his room. be Spool Sik” ties.” No matter how unusual is the color you can match it perfectly with this famous sewing silk. It he had confederates they were | Calabrian Comort frightened away by the assassins, Then | f R ARRESTING WOMAN Black Hand Literature. Abate was cut out from his gang and There was also up-to-date Iterature on | Killed.” eee) If your dealer doesn't sell Corticelli write us and we will Policeman John Leldig, of the Fast Cortielt write'us an Twenty-second street station, got his datly rebuke in Yorkville Po! urt to-day when Magistrate Steinert “Mis charged Irene Walton, who we If you're a drossinaker a about our free “E Fashion Servic« CORTICELUL SILK MILLS, of loitering on the streets and using profane language. Irene Walton is onc of two women whose testimony re- cently sent Policeman Waldman to| Sing Sing for three years for extor- tion. She and the other woman, B | Ambrose, lave been arrested frequent | ly eince. Leldig has arrested both of} them and is alleged to have sald he) would drive them out of town. He ar- raigned the Ambrose woman in York-} ville Pollee Court twice within twenty- | four hours and she was discharged both times, ‘The Walton woman was arrested Criw ‘Tuesday night In Fourteenth street by | Leldig and she gave bail, When her . case was called in court at 9.45 yester- | fay morning she was not on hand and} ‘ at Leidig’s suggestion her bail was for- felted. Fitteen minutes later the woman ap- | : Milled from the cream le $ Makes Stained itt OWD ani Glass Out of } Plain Glass L’Art Nouveau Art Panels You know ordinary W do you the beautiful, ‘artist t panels ed-glass Spécial Sale visa Half Price au P ear ‘ore 10 Magistrate Ste him as ff the p: her for the purpose of hav! forfelted, and reopened the Leidig' was a weak witness against the woman to-day, In discharging her Magistrate Steinert said that no matter how bad her character she could not be ple Me Rent to walk on the street and shou be immune from arrest un- NES-JEWELL fess caught tn (ie commiss'on of gome HECKER-JO MILLING CO. crime, MEW YORK CITY ew Yor. City 46 Broadway. Herm, Malz, 19 East Wh Brooklyn Store, 50 Billing 10c., 15c., 25c. vara

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