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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1905)
UBLItHIS PULL AttOOIATIO PHt RIPORT COViRS THK MOHNINO MILD ON THI LOWIN COLUMBIA 7 VOLUME LX NO. 144 v ASTORIA, OREGON, MONDAY, OCTOBER 16,1905 PRICE FIVE CENTS MS EI EM Demonstrations Stopped at Ncvsky. TROOPS ON THE SCENE Immense Crowds Gainer But Gendarmes Keep Them . on the Move. NATIONAL HYMN IS HISSED Printer Co On Strike On Political Grounds and Only a Few of the Lead ing Paperi Will Get Out Sheet of Any Kind Today-May Be General. M. iYtrndmrg, Oct. 13. Red (1g de iiiotiotiaUona in Nevsky thU afternoon drew immeii-e crowd of spectator, but Mualrin of gendarme and Coack drove the demonstrator away without i rewiiting to fore. 1 No disturbance oc curred In the industrial quarter of the city. targe fort- of troop were liehl in readiness In the court yard of the bar rack and In wpiare in tariou part f the city to deal with any disorder. From Nevky Prospect a band of atu lcnt and workmen, carrying red flag and chanting revolutionary aoug marched aero the river and began an len air meeting In the square in front if tlie univeralty. While the ajHwhe were in progress L the police again charged and dispersed (the crow da. In the melee a workman and a atu t lent received aahre cut. The crowd I took refuge in thr university building i and the meeting continued without be- I ing disturbed by the police. During the annual school fcatival at the fifth gymnasium today, member of I the audience began to hi the national ) hymn. A panic ensued and in the excite j. im-nt wa augumented by the exploalon '. 'f giant firecracker. Many person ' were bruised In the ruJ, but no one wa eerioiiHlv injured, The atudenta were -xaerated over the attack by the po lice and the arrest of several member , of the coalition committee at the atu dent meeting on 8cptemiNr 20 and the renewal of disorder I not improbable, A ncriou feature of the ait nation I the strike of the printer declared to night, on political ground, which la to lust for a period of three day, but may lie continued longer in ease of re pressive meaaurea or nrreJ. A few of the leading daily newspapers hops to be aide to Una a aingle iheet giving tele graphic newa, but the other will bus iehd publication entirely. Employes in several fuctorira are ready to follow the lead of the printer and the authorities are fully alive to the danger that' the strike may become a general one. Should the atrike apread grave danger ia to be apprehended from riot that Tiiay follow. FIFTEEN AERONAUTS IN AN ENDURANCE TEST Pari, Oct IS. Aernautista of France, Belgium," Spain, Biuala, Italy ami England, ascended thi afternoon from Tulllerie gardens in the presence of an enormou crowd. The contest i to be an endurance one and Is organized to benefit the sufferers of the recent earthquakes in the Province of Cakv lrla, Italy. DATTO A LI BREAKS LOOSE Informi Dattos ta Mindanao That He It Prepared to Kill Them. ' Manila, P. I., Oct. 15.-Iatto An", with fdlower In. the province of Min danao, Iim takes the aggressive and la killing many Moro friendly to the gov ernment. AH ha informed the Datto, who are alting the federal troop to elTrct hln rapture, that he I now pre pared to meat and kill them. Provision al companle of troop are now taking the field for a vigoroua campaign, aided by friendly Datto. ASHOKX AT COOS BAY Schooner Sacramento, Limber Ladea, Will Be a Total Lou. Merahfield, Oct. 13. The schooner Sacrsmento, from Kiulaw yeatcrday, lumber laden, encountered , a heavy southwest gale and a heavy westerly awell, and wa unable to get off ihore. She wa driven on the beach about a mile and a half north of Coo Bay bar. The crew waa gotten off with difficulty and the ahip I faat going to piece and will be a total wreck. Lumber and wreckage are being waahed aahore. TRAIN WRECKER FOILED. Stamford, Conn., Ot. 13. An attempt to wreck the west bound exprea of the New York, New Haven A Hartford rail road wa foiled thi afternoon a few moment before the train wa due. DOORS ARE CLOSED - :v!.' Shutting of Government Build ing Affects Many. LIKE BREAKING UP A HOME Scene More Cloiely Reeembled a Death Scene Than Shutting ap of aa Exhi bition Building Band Plays "Star Spangled Banner aa Llghta Go Out Portland, Oct. 13. There wa, no more pathetic incident connected with the passing of the Lewis and Clark expos! tion than the cloaing of the beautiful building which the United State gov eminent erected in commemoration of thi great centennial. The government building haa been one of the center around which the deepest exposition in lerest centered thi aummer. It wa the one exhibit which int created the KHr man and the rich man alike the one in which every mother' son of u felt a like proprietary interest. Ami when it waa forever closed yesterday evening at 3 o'clock there wa scarcely a dry eye in the great multitude which gathered on the island to witness the closing ceremnnie. I'p in the big building actitiment wa more unrestrained, and many friend wrung each other by the hand. They all stood it pretty well until taps sounded the aoldiera good-night and then many broke'down entirely. "Seema Just like it waa a family breaking up," explained Mr. Springinan a he aw allow ed a big lump In hi throat and cleared hi. voice. "We have been here all aummer together, and many of u were in St Loul, too. Now that it la all over well, we couldn't feel worae if we were all akin." Fifteen balloons safely, effected a start toward the 'Germ an frontier during the prevalence of an extremenly high wind. The areonauts will endeavor to beat the distance of 113 miles, and prires will be given for balloons remaining fn the air 40 hours without replenishing the gas bag. i FIRST NEWS Immediately Informed Signing of Treaty. ot FORMALLY ANNOUNCED Official Messenger in SL Peters btrg Conveys the News to the Russians. EFFECTIVE ON SATURDAY Orders Iaaned for Release of Ships In terned ia Neutral Ports Date for Ex change of Prisoners Has Not Yet Been Fixed Ministers Are Notified. St. Petersburg, (VI. 13.-The rstiflca tion of the treaty of peace was formally announced t'ii morning In tSe Official VeiM-ngtr wM"h say it operation be gan yesterday. At a g "acful mark of appreciation of the pait he took in bringing the con fere nee at Portsmouth and resultant peace, IYesidrnt Roosevelt wa the first ron notified by the Russian govern ment tliat Emperor Nicholas had rati fied the treaty. Aa soon a the empcr or' signature was affixed to the instru ment, and before the treaty had been brought back from Peterhof for the countersignature of Foreign Minister Lamsdorf, the news was sent directly to the president. The official notification to the French government, Becoming to the foreign of flee, followed several hour later. A soon a the treaty had been fully ratified the foreign office communicated to the war, navy and othe ministers and,ncc eary orders were immediately issued for bringing home some ships interned in neutral harbor. ' The date for an exchange of prisoner of war ha not yet been fixed. Effective in Japan. Tokio, Japan, Oct. 13. The peace treaty with Russia went into effect here today. The text of the treaty wa pub lished thi afternoon. Troubetskoy's Remains Removed. :St Petersburg, Oct. 13. The body of the late Prince Troubteskoy wa con veyed to Nikoal station today for re moval to Movow. A vast multiture followed the cortege. When the proces sion was nearing the station a squadron of gendarmes appeared and at the same moment a revolver shot rang out in the crowd, causing a panic The gendarme drew their sword and dispersed the crowd of mourners and spectator, who departed quietly in all direction. Aa far a ascertained no one wa injured. Among the wreath on the coffin waa one of orchids from Em peror Nicholas. , Another earthquake shock. Reggi, Calabria, Oct. 15. Another earthquake laating 10 seconds occurred th afternoon throughout Calabria and capsed great panic. The situation is repdered grave by the torrential rains wieh undermined house, causing some of them to fall, but fortunately no seri ous accident occurred. i WILL FACE THE COMMITTEE. -, ... - New York, Oct 15. James llazcn Hyde has finally decided to fact' the in surance investigation committee. Through his Attorney, Samuel Unter- meier, it was announced tonight that Hyde would be here in the next day or two. REMAINS MAY RE IN WESTMINISTER ABBEY People Believe That Sir Henry Irving Should Lie ia Hallowed Spot London, (Vt 13. That the body of Sir Henry Irving should find a resting plaec in Westminister Abbey appear to lie the general desire. An editorial in thi morning' Telegraph say: "The nation will, we are peruiaded to believe, ask thi honor for him with no uncertain voice and we know we inter pret the wish and feeling of the country when we plead for a public interment in the Abbey." It aeem beyond a doubt, that Irving sacrificed himself by hard work. He had been advised long ago to give up role owing to strain thrown on a weak heart Sir Charles Weindham says that in Feb ruary of hfyt year he begged Sir Henry to take warning and not burn the candle at both end, with reception in the morning and exacting performances in the even nig. STREET CAS JUMPS TRACK. Mischievous Boys Responsible for Injury of Thirteen Persons. Detroit, Oct. 13. Thirteen person were injured thi evening, none of them fatally, when a Tnimbell avenue car jumped the track and crashed into a tree. Pasenger inwde the car were thrown into a heap, while those on the rear platform were hurled to the lave ment. The accident resulted from a brick placed upon the track, evidently by some boy. Southern Pacific Is Asked Block Organized Gang. to RAILROAD HEN ARE INDICTED Secretary of Commerce and Labor Met acalf Requests Railroads to Prevent Employes Front Smuggling in Coolies From Mexico Spotters Are Sent Out San Francisco, Oct 15. The acqucj to the indictment of two Southern P' ciflc freight conductors at El Paso by the federal grand jury for smuggling Chinese in freight cars from Mexico into the United States, and especially Cali fornia, i a request from Secretary ot Commerce and Labor Metcalf to Julius Kmttaschnitt that the Southern Pacific official aid hi immigraion agents in stamping out the amuggling of Chinese on it west-bound freight trains from Kl Taao. KruttAschnitt has taken the matter up with hi subordinate here and it is understood that "spotter" are scatter ed along the line between Kl Paso and Loa Angele and thi city to try to discover what'tralnmcn, n any, are in terested in running through contraband Chinese. William B. Aiken and John GoJdard are the two conductor indicted. It is charged that they and a number of con federates among brakemen and con ductor divided $150 apiece for every Chinaman they succeeded in bringing in to California hidden in a boxcar. Secre tary Metcalf .informed KrutUschnitt that a, good many contraband Chinese have .entered California from El Paao during the past three or four years with the assistance of trainmen, and that the latter have divided among them many hundreds of dollars. The Southern Pacific people admit having a number of trainmen employed tn New Mexico and Arizona under aus picion, and any they will be discharged if the facts finally warrant such action. The road believe the smuggling busi- nes U practically at an end. NOMINATES CANDIDATES, SUNDAY New York, Oct 15. The municipal ownership league tonight nominated Clarence J. Shearn for district attor ney. Samuel Seabury was nominated for justice of the supreme court. SMUGGLING CHINESE KILLS WIFE OF HIS SON Desperate Deed of South Dakota Man. ENDS HIS EXISTENCE Tragedy Occurs While the Couple Are Ridiog to Depot in a Hack. DFATH FOLLOWS DISHONOR E. H. Darrow Elopes With the Wife of His Son and When Repentance Came He Shot and Killed the Woman Before ending His Own Worthless Existence Sioux City, Oct. 13. White driving in a hack from a hotel to the railway sta tion here today, E. II. Darrow, aed CO. shot 'and'killed his jn' wile, I Jllian Darrow, aged 25, and then shot and kill ed himself.,, , t , The hack driver, immediately upon bearing the first shot, without stopping to investigate, started for the police station where both occupants sitting op right on opposite teat, were found to be dead. The cause of the tragedy is not known. Darrow snd the woman came to the Arcade hotel in this city October 10, and registered "E. H. Darow and wife. Thi afternoon they started for the railwsy station, ostensibly to take the train for Sioux Falls, the home of Dar row's son. Letters were found in the woman's purse unsigned, but apparently from kher husband, saying the writer was dy ing of a broken heart. SPIRITS AID HIM Ghostly Friends Tell a Califomiaa Where He Has Money Coming From. Santa Barbara, Oct, 14, A fortune is coming to J. K. Moore of Summer land, a well-to-do old gentleman, out of a business transration that date back almost 30 year. For years Moore has utterly forgotten an investment he made in 1870, and a small sum then loaned on a mortgage nas now amounted to between $0000 and $10,000. Moore took his mortgage and for busi ness reasons transferred it to a friend of hi boyhood. Then an illness tempo rarily impaired hi memory, to which the loan never recurred. Moore claim that friend from the spirit world re minded him of it. Every detail came back to him a couple of weeks ago. With much trouble his friend, a welathy druggUt wi located in one of the noith middle state. He writes that he canceled the mortgage in 1888, receiv ing $1800 for it, and states that the money was deposited in sn Iowa bank. a' big concern. More, who figures the sum a now woith almost $10,000, ha written the bank, but has not yet had a reply. WILL ASCERTAIN OF AMERICAN FISHERAEN Gloucester, Ma., Oct. 15. As a re sult of tho po'iy recently adopted by the New Fm .dalnd government re stricting Aim ti m fishing rights on the coast of Neve "oundland, Congressman Augustus P. . dner, and Benjamin A. Smith, one of - 3 largest vessel owners FIVE TRAINMEN MEET A TERRIBLE DEATH Engineer Caught ia Cab and Cooked by Escaping Steam. Okaloosa, Ia, Oct, 15. Five train men were killed today at Beaton, I1L, when a heavy double header freight train on the Iowa Central railway ran into a bunch of cattle on the track. Both locomotive and 11 loaded freight ears were piled in a heap. The wreckage caught fire and the mangled bodies of the trainmen were only aaved from the burning debris by the quick work of the conductor, aided by farmer, living near by. One of the engineers was caught in the cab of the locomotive and cooked by the escaping steam. He lived several hour although large pieces of cooked flesh fell from his bones. NEW RECORD ESTABLISHED Results ia Pacific Coast League Ball Games Yesterday. New York, Oct 13. Martin J. Sheri dan, of the Irish-American Athletic club, the all round champion American, beat all records at throwing the discus today, establishing a new world's record of 138 feet 3 inches. Pacific Coast League. Portland. Oct. 13. Portland, 9-2; Oakland, 1-1. , San Francisco, Oct. 15. San Francis: co, 2 6; Seattle 11. I. Angele, Oct 15. Lo Angeles, 2; Tacoma, 0. 1URDER 1 Nephew of Late General Hancock Under Arrest. SISTER IS ALSO ARRESTED Prisoner Is Accused of Having Caused the Death of a Young Domestic Em ployed ia the Hancock Household by Having Criminal Operation Perfomed. I Washington, Oct 15. Winfield Scott Hancock, 43 years old, and a nephew of the late General Winfield Scott Hancock was arrested at Hyiattville, Md., late last night charged with the murder of Kmma Smillawood, a young white wo man employed as a domestic in the Hancock household, who died as the re sult of a criminal operation. Hancock disclaim all guilt and de clare the woman left hi home Mon day, but returned Thursday and died that night. Hancock wa formerly in charge of the mail at the census bureau here, but had not been employed for two years. L'pon the finding of additional -evi dence in the case, to establish a crimin al, operation, a warrant wa issued for the arrest of Mrs. Amanda Macakall, a sister of Hancock's, for complicity in the crime. EX -GOVERNOR HOGG ILL. Fort Worth, Oct 15. Ex-Governor Hogg i lying-ill from dropsy at a hotel here. He was en route to a heslth re sort when he had to stop here. The ex-governor weighs over 300 pounds, and physicians say that unless he is tspped st once he cannot survive. RIGHTS in the city, left for Washington to dis cus the situation with Secretary of State Root The object of the trip i to obtain from the state department aa , interpretation of he treaty of 1818 by which American fishermen. are guaraa-, teed certain fishing rights on the New Foundland coast S CHARGED