The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, April 11, 1901, Image 1

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, i ., .H id c.iiity ot sucU offense,
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ASTORIA PUBLIC LIBRARY ASSOCIATION
KvKY
J
VOL. Mil
ASTOKIA, OKKdOX. TH IKS DAY, AI'KIL 11, 1901.
XO. R6
m Glffll
l
-terr LP
PLUMBING
UP TO
DATE
A (Old -vorkman cn do
mora work and do It bttr
In a day than a poor ont. In
rdT to mak plumbing
hper tor our cuitomft
we employ none but aklled
mechanic!. If you want flfat
ia plumbing or attain fit
ting don 'nqulrt at tha
ECLIPSE HARDWARE CO.
AHTOItlA, OREGON
Wc Charge Nothing: for Advice
Book Bargains
.100 Cloth Bound Books, (ukhI g X! "
Title, Iliiulingimil Authors. . . . I vJ" pl
Just (he Kind for These Long Winter Evenings
Five-Volume ftd of Kipling,
Busw'll, llolmts, Ht'nty, Monti
und other good author . . .
Id?U,1o)im-8, Monty, Meade l 7C Ppp Vpt
Vial M I vl UKk
GRIPPIN G REED
ECONOMICAL
Household
Saving
Articles...
fOARD &
STOKES CO..
"r ' 1 1 "tTi
Si
: CM )
REPUTATION
REPRESENTS
PUBLIC OPINION
Reputation r-presenta public
opinion. How to get In your
favor. Make a first-class, re
liable article like the Char
ter Oak Stove and Range.
Every Charter Oak la guar
anteed. For salt? In Astoria only by
W.J. SCULLY,
431 Bond St.." !!,.
Between Ninth and Tenth.
Fancy and Staple Groceries
FLOUR, FEED, PROVISIONS,
TOBACCO AND CIGARS
Supplies of nil kinds at lowest rates, for fishermen,
Farmers and Loggers.
Aa V ALLEN, Tenth and Commercial Streets
We Rent New Typewriters.
Many new improvements addod.
See our latest
No. 2 Smith Premier Typewriter
New Art Catalogue Free .. .
L. M. ALEXANDER ft CO.
Exclusive l'acilki Coast Dealers
245 Stark St, Portland, Ore,
F W. M'KECHME. 1 oral Agent.
D,
C. J. TRENCHAR
Commission. Brokerage,
Insurance and Shipping.
Cuaitom Hotiae Broker.
,.f ASTORIA, ORE
Acsut W. F. A 0c and Paciao Kipreia Co .
BOTHA REOPENS
NEGOTIATIONS
Will Negotiate on Behalf of All
Boer Forces. -
CONSIDERS DE WET INSANE
iliiiic '), It I IfripifTltuit to inf'-t uriHI
catlon hv unification, so t strengthen
the Cnh'dlc .tliicHtlrt:i system that It
may rbf.nd Itn-lf HKdlrmt all attarkH
Tin! mw the ri-llKl'ua IfiMtru'-tlon of ltd
pi'opli, from the il.mg.Td -f non-ifll)-
Inll l ilui'fllllin."
fllll'llH cfitlllHl.-tHIrl itni'tfil thlx nig'
nlflcint :tl in at the opening of
the ctifr-n? of the fpn-ttf-ntatlvcK f
Cathirllc ciillfK-H throOKhout th" I'nlt
ei Htat.-n, The a leaker bx the hlgh--it
olllfiu in tM. catholU; ediiratlonal
nyi'-in In the country. Ir. Thonia J.
Conuty, re."tnr of th Catholic unlver
nliy at W;nihing:on, D. ('., anl pr"l-ili-nf
of the Na'.Ional AM-latln of
fatholh! collcci,
"Kntrlng tnt.i the :MTiil view of the
"Uuitlon which reetita UMf." aalil
Monlgnr Conaty, "t In Important to
reallae the mnanlna; of the facta which
face ua. Amonif the facta muat bp
reckoned the atate ubxl ayatem. with
It Hpldly lncr"aHlng;: high noh'tol and
even rol.'ge development; the tenden
cy to d away with the college by unit
Ing 'he high achod to the university;
the eatalillahment of educational Uintl
tutlona of all ort endowed by private
munlflcence of non-Cathollc and at
trac'.lng Catholic etudfita becaum; the
lrrKitialblr, undertak-a to negoilat ;" nonin nave not tne character of atate
in behalf of the entlr Jtuer force. The! Inntltutlma and the tendency of the
Mrltlnh authirltle here cnnlder that If j U'veritlu to control the Htate gchoola,
Merieml liotbi aurrendem. De Wet'a . lo dictate examlnitlona of ti-achera anJ
fallowing can x- eally taken. 1 10 uem.inl a university degree or ap
proval a a condition of appointment.
Dr. Cnria'y ?ald that the Catholic
IXmN. April 10. "It la a'ml-'fll- " "u,lM , , " "' ' 'm
, .. . . Platen l23.OfW.0OO on education, ch efly
Town c..r, ...ndent 'of the Dally Tele- I ln -""'"',. exclualve of what
Plcrca Dtalti Report of Krater'i Visit to
Aacrka-SIr Alfred Mllatr Decides
a Hank Trealaeil al Cape
Calasy Rebel.
CAI'K TOWN, April 10.-Jenera Ho
i hut hua reiK'nd negotlutlona with
the Ilrl(lnl) for peace;
It In undertd that although OJcn
eril De Wet In hla r-cent Interview
with fi-n-ral lloiha refused to aurren
h r, Oeneral !lotha, regarding l lni a
Die wet iituKsroNsntu:.
wn apent In academic,
university education.
colleKlate and
iriai.li. ''that fiernral Ilotha has hud
another Interview w r) LurJ Kitchener.
In which he Informed him he had Been
fleneral De Wet, whu still :-efu-a to
.ntrrtHln aiw ..f Miirrnder nn nnv
te. n.a. Oeneral IJotha rmrda General ' Tf",k vrMic 'AC,J l I,,,,fraMJ!"use
Sl'ICirK OF ItftrKKIt.
I!"caune He Was Suspended From
Exchange and In IX-bt.
De Wet as Irresponsible for hla ccilona
and seeks a modus vlvendl on behalf
t atl the burgher forces."
The report that Oeneral Botha has
renewed n-'gotlatlons with LorJ Kltch-
er U not vel .iffli'ljillv r.innrmit hut
It la generally credited and received T n the Hoffman House by taking
with satisfaction except by the i ltra ;
JIdk". who fear that the govern-
NKW YOHK, April JO.-IWnJIman
Forst. a broker anJ member of the Con
rnlldated Exchange, committed suicide
meni will renew the terms recently te
Joeled. KlUVHSIt NOT CO.MINO.
NEW YOHK. April 10.-C. D. I'lero-.
'carbolic acid. Forst hud outstanding
debt at the !' of busineaa In the
Consoll lit.'d Exchange yesterdiy and
was suspended, and this Is believed to
have be'n th" cause of his suicide.
Forst's partner said he lost more
than $320,000 in historic dealings but
j that his ere lit was high on exchange.
omcial-r.prenlatVe i New York of ,n mmi. wlm ther WH8 ,n ,mpreg.
LOUBET SALUTED
BY. RUSSIAN FLEET
Double Naval Demonstration at
Villefranche and Toulon.
the liners, gives a positive denial of
the statement cabled from Europe that
President Kruger will sail for the Unit
ed Htates May 31.
NO LENIENCY WITH HERELS.
Nl-W YOltK. April JO A dispatch to
the Tribune from London cays:
The war In South Africa drags
on with Its jsual checkered
course. Plctersburg han ben occupied
by Oeneral Plumer without resistance,
the Doers retreating northward and
abandonlrg a little war material. The
Dutch tactics of avoiding a conflict and
of drawing their pursuers further along,
so often pursued, have been repeated.
Th Itoer resources of craft have not
yet 1hii exhausted, for there Is an of.
flelal conflrmatlo.i of the report that
seventy-live KrltUh trixipers were sur
rounded anl raptured near Aberdeen,
Cape Colony. This is the first Boer suc
cess recorded for several months and
is proof that the guerillas can do some
thing more than to retreat more rap
idly than they can be pursued.
Sir Alfred Mllner has decided that
the time has gone for treating the Cape
Colony rehls with leniency. They will
no long.-r ba tiled under the special
rommlaslon act passed by the legislat
ure last year, but will he Indicted under
common law and will be subject there
fore to all the penalties prescribed for
the crime of treason, Including capital
punishment. Thle official announce
ment la an Indication thnt the situation
In Cape Colony Is not bo satisfactory as
the British authorities would like It to
be.
s!on that Fort was worth half a million.
ADDITION TO ENDOWMENT.
Armour Institute Oets Another Million
From Widow and Son of Its
Founder.
CHICAGO. April 10. The Armour In-
'wtilOt In thlu eltv whleh riwett ii eir-
I .. . . . ..... ...... ttL II I . T . . -
iMeuce to me line i uiup u. jvnuuui,
will tomorrow receive an addition to Us
endowment, of $1,000,000. the money
coming from Mrs. P. D. Armour and J.
Otrdeu Armour, the widow and son of
its founder. It Is expected that the
money will be used to extend the scope
of the Institution In electrical and chem
ical engineering. The Institute now has
an endowment of $500,000.
INO DISTANCE TROLLEY.
j Colorado Springs, Denver and Pueblo
to Be Joln.'d by Electric Line.
CHICAGO. April 10. A special to the
Chronicle from Colorado Springs, Col.,
says:
Colorala Springs, Denver and Pueblo
will be Joined by a trolley line to cost
$2,300,0(10. A syndicate has petitioned
for ihe right of way over the country
roads. The work will be completed In a
1 year. The fare to the terminal points
win lie 50 cents.
CAPTAIN TROWBRIDGE DEAD.
Was if Graduate of West Point and
Served In the Civil War.
NEW YORK, April lO.-Captain Jos
eph M. Trowbridge. l S. A., retired,
Is dea I at his home In Brooklyn. In the
"fith year of his age. He was born In
Brldg-wit r. N. Y In 1S24. and was
gradual id from the West Point military
academy In 1S41. During the civil war
he was a captain In the Sixteenth In
fantry. Later he was assigned to en
gineer duty nnd was on the staffs of
Generals Rosecrana and McCook.
A widow and two daughters, the wife
of Lieutenant T. R. Salisbury. U. S. N
and the wife of Lieutenant S. M. Thom
as, assistant naval constructor at the
Mare Island, California, navy yard, sur
vive him.
CATHOLIC EDUCATION.
Church Has Many Difficulties With
Which to Contend.
. CHICAGO. April 10. "Entering upon
the century the Catholic educational
system In America must be prepared to
meet with difficulties that will test
Its strength to the utmost. The unifi
cation of education under state control
haa established a mighty machine of
secularised Instruction which threatens
to destroy nil private effort either on
the part ot Individuals or of the
ESCAPED MILITARY SERVICE.
Many Wealthy Germans Paid Enor
mous Sum t Free Their Sons.
BERLIN, April 10. A sensational
trial began today at Elberfeld. at which
Pieckoff, Baumami and others are
charged with having freed from mlil
tniy service many sons of wealthy par
ents. A number of witnesses testified
to having paid from 2000 to 3000
marks for liberation, the money being
used In part in bribing military surgeons.
TWO OF CREW BURNED.
Steamer Royal. City Destroyed on the
Fraser River.
VANCOUVER, B. C. April 10,-The
Royal City, a small steamer plying on
the Fraser river, was burned at the
wharf at Mission Junction, B. C, to
day. Two of the crew, Frank Edwards
and Paul Porter, were burned to death
on the ship. The steamer Is said to
have been worth $13,000.
SOUND REPRESENTATIVES.
Empire Transportation Company Gen
eral Agent for Alaska Combine.
SEATTLE. April 10. The Empire
Transportation Company has been ap
pointed general agent for the new con
solidation of the large Alaska trans
portation and trading concerns, for Se
attle and other Puget sound ports and
Vancouver and Victoria. B. Q.
FRANCO-RUSSIAN GOODWILL
Fretck Preside!! Expressed le (bulla Ad-
mlral Apprcclitloa of Cearieiy of
Cur aad Toasted "Allied
Ruisiai Nilloa."
PARIS, Apr. 10. The imKirtant festl
vlties attending President Loubet's vis
it to the Riviera were brought to a
climax today In a double oaval demon
stratlon at Villefranche and Toulon,
Both proved splendid spectacles. The
French people, however, derive as much
pleasure from the Incidents at Ville
f rant-he as from the meeting t-t M.
Lf.ubet and the Duke of Oeno; at TtfU-
lon.
'The Russian squadron," says Le
Journal Des Debats. ''saluted the pres
ident on his departure for Toulon so
that Russia will be associated as com
pletely as could be desired with the
fetes on the Riviera. Those who have
spoken about the coolness of the two
friendly and allied countries are row
compelled to admit .hat they took the
'desire for the reality."
M. Loubet. when accepting tea from
Admiral Birlleif, said:
"I am very much pleased that his
rr.alestv. the emperor, has sent a squad
ron to salute the president of the
French republic. I am very grateful
for this mark of respr?ct and I raise
my glass to the health of their maj
esties, the emperor and empresj, and
to the friendly and alliel Russian na
tion and to the prosperity of the Rus
sian army,"
Admiral! Blrileif. suitably responded.
toasting the president of the French
republic.
UNCL3 SAM PEREMPTORY.
Cubans Miist Comply With the Condi
tions of the Piatt Amendment.
WASHINGTON. April lO.-Informa-tion
was received at the war depart
ment today to the effect that the Cuban
constitutional convention contemplates
sending, a committee here to consult
with the president and secretary of war
regarding the Piatt amendment and the
relations of the United States with Cu
ba. The delegation. It Is said, will learn
that the Cubans can bope for no mod
ification of the law by congress and
tit.at nothing can be accomplished by
waiting until another session. It also
M be made plain that the present ad
ministration does not wish any modifi
cation and that the spirit of the Piatt
amendment must be accepted. The dele
gation will be informed that they can
t'il the mmbors of the convention up
on their return that until the conditions
of the Piatt amendment are complied
with, the United States will continue
to exercise authority in the islands un
der military power.
' TRANSPORT RAWLINS SUNK.
Damage to Vessel and Cargo Over
$190,000.
NEW YORK, April 10,-Fire was dis
covered in the second hold of the trans
port Rawlins early today. The Raw
lins was at the government pier, Brook
lyn, and was to have sailed for Cuba
today.
The Are was under control after about
twe hours' work by firemen, but tte
Rawlins listed to port from the Im
mense quantity of water pumped
through the port holes by .he ilreooats.
She finally sank ln the mud at her
pier.
The cargo, a large portion of which
consisted of horse feed for irmy use,
will prove a total loss. The damage
it the transport is estimated at $30,000,
and the cargo at $SO,000.
NOTED CRIMINAL. CAUGHT.
One of Most Complete Counterfeiting
Plants Ever Found Captured
In Brooklyn.
NEW YORK, April 10. It came to
light today that the man supposed to
be Albert Jensen, who attempted to
commit suicide by twice shooting him
self In the head while being pursued by
a crowd in West street yesterday, is
not Jensen at all and is wanted by the
sroverament authorities In this country
and Sweden.
He is In reality John Albert Skoog,
33 years old, born In Stockholm, and
the son of a prominent and wealthy
family.
He early began a criminal career and
Is pronounced by an official of the
United States secret service one of the
most expert counterfeiters alive.
One of the biggest raids in the his
tory of the secret service was made to
night by Chief Haxen as the result of
the arrest of Skoog. Chief Haien, af-
ter talking with Skoog, went to a
liulldltig on Grand avenue, Brooklyn,
and arreted Emll Mob-rt. a Htvede.
One of Ihe most complete counterfeit
ing nlants ever found was discovered
In the house. Long-siught plates for
3f-krner notes of the Bank of Swe
den and l'to-kroner notes of the Bank
of Copenhagen were among those
found. They w-re burled with other
plates for the making of 20 notes of
the Bank of Scotland, which It Is said,
the se ret service of Great Britain has
been trvlnir t- run down.
Inew testimony
IN GOEBEL CASE
BAD TRAIN WRECK.
Five Persons Injured and Nine Cars
Burn-.! on Southern Pacific.
SAN MIGUEL. Cal., April 10,-The
night express from Los Angeles run
ning over the new Southern Pacific
coast division to San Francisco waa
wrecked near Bradley at 1:30 this morn
ing. On, passenger and four trainmen
were Injured. Fire broke out In the
wreck and nine cars were burned, in
cluding the mail car, baggage car and
seven tourist coaches. Two Pullmans
and the private car Sacramento,
occur, cd by D. O. Mills, of New York,
his son and wife and several friends,
were saved from the fire by being
pushed away from the burning cars by
band.
The ascident was caused by a broken
flange. The seven coaches which were
burned were equipped with Plntch eas
and it Is suppoied than when the cars
overturned the gas ignited the coal
and started a conflagration.
Ex-Governor W. 0. Bradley on
Witness Stand.
GOEBEL'S DEATH FORETOLD
WINTER WHEAT CONDITION.
Reported to Be Much Better Than Us
ual at This Time of the Year.
WASHINGTON. April lO.-The Awll
report of the statistician of the depart
ment of agriculture will show the aver
age condition of winter wiieat, April 1,
to have "been 91.7 against 82.1 April 1.
1900. 8;.9 at tho corresponding date !n
1S93, and 82.. mean ot the April aver
ages of the last :en years.
MYSTIC SHRrNEilS COMING.
SAN FRAXCISCO, April lO.-fhe
Mystic Shrlners. a hundred strong, who
have been visiting the Hawaiian Isl
ands, left here tonight on a special train
fcr Portland.
Ei'Ooveraor W. S. Taylor Allejed la Hare
Stated Beforehand Wbei GoebeJ
Wis to Be Sfaot Caputs
" Ripley Trial.
FRANKFORT, Ky., April 10.-Ex.
Governor W, O. Bradley, who was'
chief counsel for ex-Governor W. 8.
Taylor in the gubernatorial contest be
fore the legislature last vear, gave
sensational testimony this afternoon la
the trial of Caotain Oarnett D. Ripley
who is charged with conspiracy with,
others to bring about the murder of"
William E. Goebal.
Bradley detailed a conversation which
he said he had with Captain Ripley
while the latter was in charge ot hla
military company during the occupancy
of the state capital by the Taylor
troops last spring. In which. Ripley toll
him of frequent conferences with Gov
ernor Taylor prior to the assassina
tion. .
The witness said that Ripley told him
he' was in the executive office the day
before the shooting and complained to
Taylor because he bad not called out
his (Ripley's) company and asked him
when he should have the company
ready.
Taylor replied to Ripley. ' ,
"My God, haven't you brought them
yet? Goebel will not live twenty-four
hours."
MAGAZINE EDITOR DEAD.
NEW YORK, April 10.-Wlll!am Jay
Youmans, for many years editor of the
"Popular Science Monthly," died today
at his home ln Mount Vernon. N. Y
of typhoid fever.
PROTECT
OUR
LITTLE ONES
DON'T buy clothes made by child
labor in unhealthy sweat shops.
BUY
Onion Made Clothing
And feel that the coat on your back
or the pants you wear are not
stained by the sweat rolling from
underpaid Child Labor, Scab Labor
or Penitentiary Labor.
BUY UNION ftIAD
Suits, Hats, Overalls,
Dress or Working Pants
THE RELIABLE.
VI 'm m-