The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, September 24, 1902, Image 1

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    NOTIOB!
Books, Periodicals, Magazines. &c,
Are Hot to be Taken F:n Tbo
I ihrarx without .trjrmfcsiCM. AnY
ASTORIA PUBLIC LIBRARY ASSOCIATION
5?
MW - f ' " ' " A I A.
ONLY PAPER PUB
LISHED IN ASTORIA
WITH ASSOCIATED
PRESS SERVICE . . .
LARQEST CIRCULA
TION IN CLATSOP
AND TUB ADJOINING
COUNTIES ......
m
(If
liable If.
ASTORIA, OREKON, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 21, 1902.
VOL. LV
NO. 71
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" ARMT NEWS! '
Tenth Artillery Leaves Columbia for
Duty at Fort Snelllng, Minn.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 2S.-The fol
lowing changes of station of troops
have been ordered at the War Depart
ment:
Upon completion of duty In the Na
tlonal Park rhe two troops of the Third
Cuvalrjr now In the Department Of
California will be relieved from duty
In that department. The major and
one troop to be selected by the depart
ment commander, will be sent to Boise,
WILLI AM H. YOUNG.
Supw)fed Tulltior Murderer Is Wanted
at Seattle for Forgery.
NEW YORK, Sept. 23,-Capluln Tl
tun, chief of detectives, who telegraph
ed several days ago to Seattle for In
formation regarding William Hooper
Young, JUHt arrested on suspicion of
having killed Mrs. Joseph Pulitzer In
this city, has received a dispatch from
Chief Sullivan of Seattle, saying Young
lived there in 1901 and Is still wanted
on two charges of forgery
BIQ LOG RAFT.
Interferes With Business In the Oak
land Estuary.
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 23.-In re
sponse to numerous complaints from
shipowners and masters. Collector of
the Port Stratton has ordered the I in
mediate removal of the big log raft
which recently arrived from the North"
and which now Impedes navigation In
the Oakland estuary.
WEALTHY MAN SUICIDES.
SAN BERNARDINO. Cal.. Sept. 23.-
Kurus Lane, one or tne best known
residents of this valley, was found
dead this afternoon, with his head
nearly severed from his body. He had
cut his throat with a razor. Lane was
one of the wealthiest men In this city.
iuskhall
pacific league.
At Portland Portland, 0; Spokane, 5.
At Seattle Seattle, 6; Helena, 0.
At Tacoma Tacoma, 0; ' Butte, S,
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
At PhllaMphla-rhlladelphla, 8; Bal.
tlmore, 3.
At Washington Washington, 1; Bos
ton, 14.
At Cleveland Clevelnnd, 0; Detroit,
5.
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
At New York-New York, 1; Boston,
At Brooklyn-Brooklyn, 1; Philadel
phia, s.
ROUMANIAN JEWS
WILL BE PROTECTED
Joint Action of England and
America Calls Forth Euro
pean Attention.
Other Powers Have Tried to
SuppreM An Outrage Which
Anglo-Salon May Now
KuppresM.
(
LONDON, Sept. 23.-The Daily Tele
graph In an editorial article on Great
Britain's "unhes'tatlng" support of
Secretary Hay's Roumanian note,
says:
However unwelcome may be the phe
nomencn to certain sections of conti
nental opinion there is but little
doubt that the significant co-opratkn
of the two Anglo-Saxon powers will
go' far to put an end to a condition of
things which lsa scandal to modern
civilization and a reproach to every
country responsible for the Berlin
treaty."
Tho Telegraph, noting that Count
Von Bulow ha gained considerable
diplomatic experience at Bucharest,
takes leave to doubt whether the Ger
man chancellor will adopt crudely the
anti-American attitude which Is being
pressed upon him from Intemperate
and injudicious quarters.
The paper says that after the Inci
dent of the sinking of the Haytlen
revolutionary gunboat Crete-a-Pierrot
by the Gernwnjrrulser Panther, it Is
absurd to say that the United States
has no right to Interfere In this mat
ter.
"In any case," says the Telegraph,
"Lord Lansdowne's action has settled
any difference which might have ad
vanced on acount of the United States
not being a signatory of the Berlin
treaty."
Referring to the subject editorially,
the Times this morning says the Brit
ish note Is confined at tbe present
stages as to Inquiry aa to what view
the other signatory powers take of
Seeretnr Hoy's note. "The correspon
dence published," says the Times,
"shows that the subject has produced
deep impression on public opinion in
Great Britain. If the Roumanian gov
ernment la able to contradict the
statements made It should do so with
out delay. Apparetnly, however, it has
reckoned up the cost and Is willing
to Incur any possible risk If It can only
rid Itself of the Jews. There Is shrewd
ness In the calculations of the Rouma
nian government that no coercive in
tention by all the powers is to be ex
pected and that Isolated Interference
by one or two governments is not
likely to be pushed beyond the point
of remonstrance.
"The differences of enforcing the ob
ligations of the Berlin treaty are ob
viously very great and If any efficient
check Is placed upon the anti-semltic
legislation of Roumania, It will most
likely be done in an Indirect way. Rou
mania Is not In such prosperous finan
cial condition as to be able with inv
pitnity to affront a race which reckons
among Its members the leading finan
cial magnates of Europe."
In another dispatch from Vienna the
correspondent of the Times says that
Secretary Hay' Roumanian note has
not only given the newspapers a top
ic, but that It hua given diplomacy
task. More than one of the powers
has remonstrated with Roumania, says
the correspondent, but their warnings
have been ignored, . The ruthless per
secution of the Jews continues and
there Is no prospect of Its abatement
Austria-Hungary long ago warned
Roumania, and what Austria fulled to
achieve the United States is not likely
to accomplish, even with the moral
support of the other powers.
"Indeed," continues the correspond
ent, "I hear from Bucharest that a cap
tious interpretation of artlcie 44 of the
Berlin treaty Is ready as a reply to
any further diplomatic representa
tions. Coercion, of course, is out of
the question.
The United State governments must
reckon with Its own Jewish element
special legislation againpt the Immlga
awl It In not likely to resort to any
tlori of Roumanian Jew, while the Eu
ropean government,, which did not
venture to move In the case of the
Armenian massacres are not l'kf ly to
do much in behalf. of the Roumanian
Jew.
"It In already obvious," concludes
the correspondent, "that America's
generous efforts will lead to no prac
tical result"
N. Y. REPUBLICAN CONVENTION.
Meets and Adjourns Lively Interest
Among Delegates.
SARATOGA, N. Y Sept 2J.-The
Republican state convention met to
day and was addressed by Lemuel E.
Quigg, temporary chairman. Timothy
E. Ellsworth was chosen permanent
chairman. The committee on platform
not being ready to report, adjourn
ment was taken until tomorrow morn
ln. When the ntws of the trouble Le-
tween the leaders became public the
previous apathetic attitude of the
rank and file of the delegates chanjed
to one of the liveliest Interest.
Governor O'Dell reached here at J:20
o'clock and went at once to Senator
Piatt's cottage. At 2 o'clock this
(Wednesday) morning. Governor O'Dell
announcjd that Sheldon had with
drawn from the con'est At this hour
the indications are that Senator Frank
A. Hlggins, of Cattarugas, will be the
nominee for lieutenant-governor.
STATE AFTER BRIBERS.
St. Louis Prosecutors Are Now Gath
ering Evidence Against Millionaires
ST. LOUIS. Sept. 21-Ex-Council-man
Frederick G. Uthotf, who It Is
said was "buncoed" out of $46,000 of
$70,000,000 it is alleged he received for
his vote for the Central Traction bill,
by R. M. Snyder, of Kansas City, has
returned from Colorado and was i
conference with Attorney Folk this
afternoon. It Is believed UthofTs re
turn is second In Importance only to
the return of John K. Murrell. afld
that the revelations render unnecessary
the testimony of Charles Kelley, who
Is wanted by the state as a witness
against certain millionaire brlbe-giv
ers.
CULVERT BLOWN UP.
SCRANTON, Pa., Sept 23. A cul
vert on the Bloom division of the
Lackawanna A Western railroad, near
the Lackawanna station was blow
up by dynamite tonight
Wyjack Mojowski,, a striker, was
shot through the body by a guard at
the Raymond colliery In Archibald to
day. Physicians say he will die.
STRIKERS FIRE VOLLEY.
LEBANON. Pa., Sept 23. The first
batalllon of the Twelfth regiment
reached here tonight
Tonight the strikers fired several
volley at the works of the Ajnertean
Steel Companny. H. M. Richards,
treasurer of the company, was wound
ed In the Bide,
STRIKE NEARING CLOSE.
NEW YORK. Sept. 23. Regarding
the situation in the anthracite fields.
President Faer, of the Philadelphia
Reading rlftlroad said that every day
showed a larger proportion of the strlk
era returning to work. President Un
derwood, of the Erie, said: "The
strike Is breaking up, but I will not
attempt to predict when it will end."
DAN PATCH EQUALS RECORD.
READVILLE. Mass., Spt 23.-Dan
Patch this afternoon went against the
world's record of 1:594. made by Star
Pointer, five years ago, and In a mag
nlfleent performance equalled the ree
ord. There was not a skip for the
whole mile, his legs moving wtth per
feet regularity. It was not until the
third quarter that everyone felt that
the record was In danger. Up the
stretch he came, beating out the run
ner and flashing under the wire, his
time being
Driver Mcenry was wildly cheered
and the crowd rushed to the rails to
see the horse blanketed and led away.
COUNTERFEITER SHOT.
TACOMA. Sept. 23.-Ed Hansen, the
counterfeiter, who escaped from the
arovernment penitentiary on McNeil's
Island yesterday, was shot and cap
tured by a rancher who was In search
of the prisoner. Hansen refused to
surrender and the man shot him
through the stomach. Hansen wus
taken back to the prison on a stretch
er, and the physicians there were sum
moned. His condition is critical.
MILLIONAIRE'S SON DEAD. ,
PHOENIX. Ails., Sept. 23. A report
nas Just reached here of a disastrous
fire at Planet Saturn mine, in Fools
Gulch, In which a son of W. A. Clark
was burned to death.
PLUCKY PRESIDENT
BEARS IN SILENCE
Continues Tour and Hides His Wounds-Nature
Asserts Itself and Lays Him Down- -Trip
Abandoned. '.
At
Indianapolis His Strong Constitution Gives
Way-Leg Swells Seriously and Immedi
ate Operation Necessary.
INDIANAPOLIS, Sept 23.-Presldent
Roosevelt's Western trip came to an
untimely end In this city today. He
was found to be suffering from a
swelling of his left leg between the
knee and ankle that required an im
mediate surgtcal operation, and be was
conveyed to St Vlncenfs hospital,
where he was operated on. The op
eration lasted only a sort time. At
7:60 p. m. he was conveyed on a
stretcher to the 'train ' and left for
Washington.
The first Intimation that anything
was wrong came in rumor to the
great crowd that was patiently wait
ing around the Columbia Club for the
president to appear. It was 3:30
o'clock, one-bait hour after the time
set for the president leaving the city,
that a few of the favored ones, in the
crowd received the -information that,
the president was"slcfc and" tnat""lhe
rest of the trip would be abandoned.
Finally It was noticed tha.t a mavt
ment of some kind was on. The pres
ident's carriage stood in front of the
entrance of the club, with Colonel
Wilson, the governor's private secre
tary, Inside.
The command was given , to make
room and a path was cleared from the
club entrance to the carriage, and the
president accompanied by Senator
Fairbanks, hastily entered the car
riage. Colonel Wilson got out and
Senator Fairbanks, Secretary Cortel
you and Governor Durbln took scats
In the carriage wtth the president.
Amid the sound of many horses
trotting upon the asphalt and the
rattling of the carriages could be
heard the cheers of the peop'e, who
thought that they were bidding the
president good bye. In a few minutes
St Vlnvent hospital was reached and
the operation began, without A Any.
The swelling of the president's leg,
which made an operation necesiaiy
was occasioned by a bruise received
the time of the trolley accident at
Pittsfield, Mass. Besides being Injur-
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ed in the face and across the eye, th
president received a blow upon the
Inner part of his leg, between the an
kle and the knee, but he paid no at
tention to it Ignoring It as a slight
bruise, not worth talking about
INDIANAPOLIS, Sept 23.-The fol
lowing official statement was Issued
this evening:
"At 3:3 P- m. the president went to
St Vincent's hospital and shortly aft
erwards an o Deration- was performed
by Dr. George H. Oliver, of Indianapo-.
lis. He Is In consultation with the
president's physician, Dr. George " A.
Lung, and Dr. George
J. Cook, Dr.
1
Henry Jameson and Dr. J,
Rlch-
ardson. . . "
"At the conclusion of the operation,
the physicians authorized the -following"
atatetMair " -" ' " i V- ' ' " '
"As a result of traumatism (bruise)
received Inv the trolley accident at
Pittsfieid, Mass., there was found to
be a collection of serum in the middle
of the left anterior tlbal region. The
matter, about two ounces, was re
moved. "The Indications are that the presi
dent should make a speedy recovery.
It Is absolutely Imperative, however,
that he should remain quiet and re
frain from using his leg. . The .trouble
is not serious, but temporarily disab
ling. GEORGE CORTELYOIT,
Secretary to the President"
RICHMOND, Ind., Sept. 23. Presi
dent Roosevelt's tra'n arrived here at
9 45 p. m. The president was resting;
easily and the wound In his leg shows
no immediate effects.
He Is cheerful and Is lying In bed
with his leg propped up on pillows.
The train. Is due to arrive in Wash
ington at 6-30 tomorow evening. It
was learned tonight that his determi
nation to abandon hs trip was reach
ed yesterday, and notices were sent
to those Interested In the places the
president was to visit.
AND OUTSIDE
.I1- j
Plumbers and Steanifitters li
li
' " "jmsis"?