PUBLISHED THREE T. MANY NEW FACES! j Special Ses iioo of Congress Began on ? Tuo^iay at Tail's Call. REFORM OF THE TARIFF Tbe Republicans Control the Senate, Bus Democrats Have Large Major ity in tlie House, and Are Willing to Assume All the Responsibility for Relief Legislation. Representative Champ Clark of Missouri ";?as elected speaker of the Sixty-second congress, which con vened in extra session at twelve o'clock on Tuesday. He polled 217 votes against 131 for James R. Mann of Illinois; 16 for Henry A. Cooper of Wisconsin, and one for George W: Norris of Nebraska. The last three are: Republicans. The opening ceremonies of the house held an unusual interest. It was the first time in 16 years that the Derne crats had taken up the con duct of i.'.ffairs In the lower branch of the national legislature. New hands were at the wheel, while the helmsmen of former days were about to engage in the pastime of rocking the boat. The transition from a month ago was complete. New faces were ev erywhere to be seen. Democrats not only filled the side of the chamber allotted to them but poured over into the erstwhile sacred precincts of the Republicans. Members of the house, always ti .rdy on ordinary days of the session, began to arrive at the capi tol Tuesday morning with the earli est of spectators and the floor was. crowded almost as soon as the gal leries. * I ;. Visitors thronged the office of Speaker-to-be Clark during the two hours before the convening of the house. Among them were Mr. Mann, minority leader, who called to con gratulati! the man who was sched uled to beat him for speakerehip; Governor Harmon of Ohio, William Jenningt; Bryan and Samuel Gonip ers, president of the American Fed eration of Labor. Mr. Bryan was closeted with Mr. dark for 15 minutes. Exercising his privilege as a former member of the house, Mr. Bryan appeared in the chamber at 11:45 a. m.. He was greeted with applause -and cheers on the llobr and In the galleries. A few minutes later . Governor! Harmoi of Ohio appeared on the floor ard the cheering was renewed. When Governor Harmon made his way up to Mr. Bryan and the two stood shaking hands and chatting to gether, the uproar was deafening. Mr. i'lann, the new minority lead er, also was greeted with applause. Mr. Ma an and Mr. Clark, as the two candidates for the speakership, haa their p ctures taken in the speaker's offices. Mrs. Clark and her daughter and son comprising the speaker's family, were with him in his new of fices aid exchanged greetings with many of the visitors.. The interesting situation of a Democratic house and a Republican j senate meeting to consider a Taft ad ministrative measure directs unusual attention to the convening ofjthe Six-! ty-secv. ud congress in extraordinary sessior at noon on last Tuesday. The politic il complexion of the two houses are as follows: House?Democrats 228; Republi cans 160; Socialist 1; vacancies 2? the ninth Iowa and second Pennsyl vania ilstricts. Senate?Republicans 50: Demo crats il; vacancy 1?from Colorado. The roll calls in the two brancneb showed some remarkable changes from the last session. In the house the Democrats show a gain of 54 members and the Republicans a loss of 55 the Socialist member, Victor Berge:* of Milwaukee, accounting for the difference in the equation. By reason of the change resulting from ;he election last November, new faces are seen not only in the mem bership of the house, but In the whole organization. Republican employes in gieat number will go out and their places will be filled by Demo crats. Choice rooms in the capitol and the house office building, long controlled by the Republicans, will be surrendered to the representatives of the party which is to gather up the house reins. Instead of the 59 Republicans who occur led seats in the senate on March 4, there are only 50 now. The ranks of the minority has Increased from 32 to 41 and to 42, when the va cancy in Colorado Is filled. There; was one vacancy in the last session, caused by the death of the late Sen-1 ator Hughes of Colorado. A more; notable event than the large number of new faces in the senate and the! house will be the absence of so many veteran legislators. The speaker's marble rostrum will not r>>Kound with the vigorous whacks of the Cannon gavel, for Mr. Cannon will appear in the ranks of the minor-! ity now. Veterans of many legisla tive (struggles will be missed from the: hous:' floor. Chief among these whose absence will loom large will be Taw ney of 'Minnesota, Routell of Illinois. Scot: of Kansas, McKinley of Cali forn a, Bennet, Fish, Parsons and! Cocks of New York; Hull and Smith,! of Icwa, Kenby of Michigan and Keif- j er o.' Ohio. Four members?Hitch-! cock of Nebraska, Poindexter of | Washington, Gronna of North Dakota! and 1'ownsend of Michigan, have been tMES A WEEK mi SfcVtkE STORM WIND, RAIN AND HAIL DO DAM AGE IS SEVERAL SECTIONS. j Does Much Damage in Alabama, Where It Spreads Desolation and Havoc in Places. A dispatch from Montgomery says desolation and havoc have been wrought in many parts of Alabama by a general severe wind and rain storm, cyclonic in its nature in some places, and accompanied by heavy lightning and hail in others, which started Monday niglit, terminating late Tuesday afternoon. Telephone and telegraph wires are down in many sections, and only meagre details of the damage done can be learned. Traffic on several railroads wa6 delayed during all of Tuesday. Trees uprooted, houses and stores damaged, some completely demol ished, light plants put out of com mission, street car service impaired and streets flooded by the heavy downpour of rain are the reports that were received Tuesday night from the ?torm-visited sections of the State. ?In Selma the storm was severe. Shingles were blown from the roofs of houses, trees uprooted, signs blown down, fences raised and houses damaged by rain, which fell in tor rents while the storm was raging. The light plant wa.3 put out of com mission and Tuesday night the city wa6 in total darkness. The Btreets are littered and strewn with limoB from the shade trees of the city. Telephone and telegraph wires were snapped and all the telephones are out of cf-der. At TJniontown, in Perry County, high wind was accompanied by a regular hail storm and much damage was done. Fruit and vegetable crops were badly damaged. Gadsden was also among the storm-struck cities, many telegraph poles being blown down, trees up rooted and the city light plant crip pled. Reports from Bay Minette, Brew ton, Demopolls, Marion "Junction, Evergreen, . Decatur, Huntsvilie, Coleman and other places tell of se vere wind and rain storms, which diet considerable damage. ? Clanton experienced the fiercest wind and rain storm Tuesday after noon that has visited that section In many years. Trees were uprooted and .houses more cr less damagea.l The Couri House tower was badly j damaged and the e'ectric light plant j put out of commission by falling j trees. < 'Much damage was done by the heavy southwest gale, which swept! over Gulfport, Miss., and harbor Tuesday afternoon. The German ship. Sacken dragged anchor and fouled a small schooner. The schoon er Robert G. Dunn was blown from her moorings and rammed the tug Gulfport, doing $-00 damage. Will Smith, a negro, trying to es cape the fury of the gale, ran In front of a train and was killed. elevated to the senate. No longer will the senate roll call open with the familiar name of Al drich, the Rhode Island leader having voluntarily renoumed another term to devote himself to leisure and thb study of monetary reforms. He will be succeeded bv Henry F. LippUt. Many other striking figures will be missed from the senate floor, notably Hale of Maine, succeeded by Chas. F. Johnson; Beverldge of Indiana, who was vanquished by John W. Kem;j Kean of New Jersey, in whose place! will bo James E. Martine; Warner of j Missouri, replaced by James A. Reed; I Dick of Ohio, replaced by Atlee Pom-1 erene, and Carter of Montana, suc ceeded by Henry T. Meyers. All of these changes represent Democratic gains except in the case of Rhode j Island. - The vther senate changes will be Frazier of Tennessee, succeeded by Luke Lea, the youngest of all tne senators; Money of Mississippi, whose j place will be filled by John Sharp j Williams, formerly the Democratic leader of the house; Flint of Call-) fornia, whose toga will grace the shoulders of John D. Works; j Bulkely of Connecticut, who gives' way to George P. McLean, formerly governor of his State; Burrows ofi 'Michigan, whose mantle is to be wo'h j by former Representative Townsend; Burkett of Nebraska, succeeded by former Representative Hitchcock; j Scott and Elkin regular session the tariff could be re-j vised and the new appropriation bills: scaled down accordingly. I The promise made by President Taft that the tariff board will be I ready with a complete report on the ; textile schedules of the tariff by De cember 1, next, and the hope he has informally expressed that Congress will decide to wait for this report be fore acting on these schedules, makes ; the situation a little more difficult for the Democrats in that the insur gent vote in the Senate has an ex-! , cuse for crawfishing on their demand j ' for tariff reform. It is pointed out that with a re port on the much-discussed cotton i and woolen schedules promised by i next December, the insurgent Repub-j . licans will not stultify themselves by' ' voting for House bills amending; these schedules without regard to the, .tariff board. There is little doubt I hut that consideration of the reclpro-1 city measure will occupy many weeks of the Senate's time. It Is argued i that it would be late in June before consideration could be given in the, Senate to a House bill dealing with j even one schedule of the Payne-Aid-1 rich law. With a determination of thirty or ' more Senators that no such legisla tion should be enacted at the extra session, it can be easily seen, accord ins to the Republican leaders, that attempts to get such measures through ahe extra session would be. futile. This does not mean that the President will look unkindly toward a revision of the tariff on necessities of life not included- in the Canadian agreement. Tn fact, it is to the con trary. The President expects the Dem ocrats and insurgent Republicans to make reductions in the tariff. Won't Try Cses. The general impression in Colum bia is that Attorney General Lyon will refuse to carry any other of the, graft cases to trial duing the admin istration of Governo Ulease as the result of the pardon of John Black, j 4 PKEL 6. 1911. HITS THEM HARD PATENT MEDICINE MAKERS LOSE IMPORTANT CASE. Manufacturers Denied the Right to Dictate Prices to the Selling Houses. The attempt to put the ban on "cut rateB" in proprietary medicines in this country received the unqalifled disapproval of the Supreme Court of the United States Monday. That tri bunal declined in an opinion by Jus tice Hughes to give its aid to such an attempt on the ground that it would afford the manufacturers of medicine an unlawful monopoly. The question of the right of a manufacturer to control the price of his article to the consumer arose in a suit begun by the Doctor Miles Medi cal Company, of Elkhart, Ind., against a wholesale dealer in medi cines in Cincinnati, John D. Park & Sons Company. The manufacturer sought to enjoin the Cincinnati firm from inducing dealers who had procured medicines from the fanufacturer to sell in vio lation of a contract with the manu facturer, and from selling medicines procured in this way at "cut rates." Justice Lurton, then a judge in the circuit court, announced the opinion of the circuit court of appeals of the Sixth circuit, denying the injunctions! sought. He said that while the man ufacturer of medicines under a secret, formula has a right to a monopoly of; manufacture until the formula was! discovered by fair means, yet courts! could not insure him the "unneces-l sary monopoly" of controlling the! price to the consumer. Justice Lurton added that such a manufacturer would be accorded oth erwise a greater privilege than an in ventor. He pointed out that an in ventor must make public his inven-! tion, which becomes the property oi the public afi:er a few years, but a manufacturer of a proprietary medi cine under a mere secret fomula, might enjoy a monopoly forever. Justice Hughes today quoted ap-1 proviii5ly from Judge Lurton's opin-j ion, and stated that the medicine company had made the mistake ofj considering its monopoly of manufac-' ture to Ua monopoly of sale. Justice rlolmes, in a dissenting j opinion, said that he b^'i^ved polio of letting people manag- cheir busi ness in their own way as much asi possible. Furthermore he stated he. believed there was a tendency to overvalue the benefits of competition, to the public. CHILD LOST TEN YEARS. Youth Blown Away in Galveston Hur ricane is Recovered. In the hurricane and tidal wave on Sept. 8, 1900, the three-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wood son, of El Dorado, Tex., who were visiting relatives near Bolivar, on Galveston bay, was swept away when the house was carried by the sea in land nearly a mile. A few days ago a trading salesman heard the story oi the finding of the child in a pasture by a man. who placed the boy in an asylum in San Antonio. The sales man knew the Woodsons, who have since moved to Kansas City, and the child now nearly 14 years old, was traced to a family near Fredericks burg, Tex. The family adopted the child six years ago. Identity was established by a gold 1 medal with the child's initials on graved on it, which he wore when he was swept away, and a birthmark on the body. The parents believed the j boy had been carried to sea. KILLED ON WAY TO CHCRCH. | Stranger Slain With Shotgun in Greenville Sunday. A strange negro man, supposed to; be named Frank Gary, judging from the name on a tax receipt of Hart county, Georgia, was shot and in-, stantly killed about 11 o'clock Mon day night by a negro supposed to be Gamp Smith at Greenville. The de.io negro was en route to church with a young negress. The parties met on j the sidewalk on Green avenue, a dou-: ble-barreled shotsun was brought into action and the strange negro fell! to the ground with a hole torn in his breast. The negress fled and has niH yet been found. Residents of that section claim they saw Smith flee down the road with a shotgun after the shooting. ed. An arrest has been made.