The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, November 26, 1905, Image 1

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UILIIHII FULL AttOOIATIO PRItl RIPORT
COVIflt THE MOANING FIILO ON Tell LOW! COLUMBIA
VOLUME LX NO. 183
ASTORIA, OREGON SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26 1905
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Ma assr -T W "
BUGULTY
ON ALL SIX
ConvlctedJBy Federal Jury
On Evry Count.
JURY OUT TWO HOURS
Charged rVth Indictment of Hiv
ing Accepted Fees for Act
ing as Attorney.
EXCEPTIONS WILL BE FILED
Convlctod Senator Ordered to Appear la
Court Monday, When HU Attorney!
Will Promt Their Bill to the Court
and Ask (or a Appeal.
M. Inils, Kov. 23. Senator lturton,
x( Kansas, vie tonight found gillty on
II tlx count of the indictment upon
which he ha beea on trUJ the peat
week, in the United Slate circuit court,
charged with baring agreed to swept
nl having accepts!, compensation from
tlx Klalto Crain A. Securities Company
f St, Louie, to appear for that com
pany in the capacity of an attorney be
fore tiit poetoftlce department.
The verdict was brought in at 12:50
o'clock, two houra and twenty five min
ute after the Jury received the caae.
Burton tu ordered to appear la court
Monday morale f, when, countal an
nounced, the bill of exception will be
jiiewiiOd and an appeal aked for.
PRESIDENT APPROVES SENTENCE.
Washington, Xuv. 23.- President
Roosevelt has approved the sentence
of Captain Alga II. Perry of the Twenty
ninth Infantry, who by two court msr
UhIn, was condemned to dismissal from
the army, on charges of conduct unbe
coming an officer and a gentleman. ,
DOCTOR IS MURDERED BY
ANOTHER DOCTOR'S WIFE.
Mi.uti.vllo, Mi. Nov. 2.1. Mrs. .!.
IUrdsong, wife of a physician, walked
into the office of Dr. Thomas Butler to
lay, shot llutler Ave times with a pis
tol, killing him instantly. The cause
of the tragedy is not known.
4 NO MORE PRAYERS FOR THE
4 SUPREME COURT.
Muuon, Ga., Nov. 25. liWiop
Henry V. Turnen, the leading
l.ilmp jn the African Methodist
church made an Impassioned at-
t ark tiMin the government and
the United State Supreme Court
in his annual address yesterday
to the Macon conference. He
4 said: "I am not pleased with this
nation. No man hate this na-
0 tion more than I do. When I go
to nay my prayer I have a
struggle to get to the place
where I am willing for God to
e allow the United State Supreme
0 Court to have a pert In my pray-
er. That damnable institution
e hns robbed the negro of every
vistage of human and manhoods'
e right. The men that compose
e that body may get w neaven
e the best wy they can, but It I
e little help Ood will grant for
any request that I make. The
0 negro will never be anything in
e thl country but a scullion until
e he show hi manhood. Go to
V Africa and build up a great na-
tion that will command the re- .
0 spect of the civilized world."
KINO HAAKON AND QUEEN
GREET NORWEGIANS.
(l.rl.tlsnU. Nov. 25.-On ar-
riving at Horten, on the I'lirls- )
tiania Fjord, King Haakon and
Queen Maud sent a telegram of
0) greeting to the Norwegian peo-
pie. Their journey ha been de-
luyed by storm. The king and
ipieen will make their formal en-
try into the kingdom today. 0)
Prirn-e Henry of Prussia Is a 0)
guest of their majestic on board
the yacht Danneborg.
DRESDEN CHINA INTENDED FOR
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT STOLEN
Robbery of Present of King of Saioay
Perpetrated While Article Were
Being Conveyed on a Bart.
New York, Nov. 23.-A cble dispatch
to the Herald from Berlin, ay the
police of Hamburg have discovered that
thieve have taken a splendid consign
ment of Dresden china, which waa to
have been sent to President Roosevelt.
The robbery was perpetrated recent
ly while the china wa being conveyed
in a barge from Meissen to Hamburg,
stones being ubtitucd in the chest.
The polite in searching In the domi
ciles of several barge men found some
of the plate which were a part of the
consignment. These were decorated with
the pictures of the King of England and
Mis Roosevelt ami a dedication and
the inscription, "From the King of Sax
ony." The culprit ha confessed.
Other parts of the consignment have
been found in various place along the
FJbe. There I hope that the whole
service may be recover d.
PROPERTYATTACHED
Federal Authorities Levy on Ad-
ims
Rcil EsUte.
LEACH ARRIVES ON SCENE
Superintendent of San Frandaco Mint,
Who Conducted Investigation! of Do
funct Seattle Cashier of Amy Office',
Take Step to Recover Plunder.
Seattle, Nov. 23. Several develop
ments occurred today during the in
vestigation of the peculations of Cashier
George K. Adams, the United State as
say officer, following the arrival of
Superintendent Frank A. Leach, of the
San Francisco mint, under whose gen
eral direction the evidence against
Adums was collected. Superintendent
U-Hch announced the issuance of attach
ment against the money end property
in Adums' name, to the value of $37,-
000. He also set at iet the speculation
of the legal status of tlie case (y an
nouncing that the gold dust which Ad
it m stole was the property of the Gov
ernment, and not that of the individual
miners who deposited it.
ITALIANS KILL COUNTRYMEN
WITH ROBBERY AS MOTIVE.
Chicago, Nov. 23. Two Italian sec
tion band were killed and two other
mortally wounded today, by three other
Italian, who entered a freight car at
Wlnthrop Harbor, 43 mile north of
this city, and fired at them repeatedly.
The men were member of the con
struction gang. The murderer fled.
The motive i thought to have beon
robliery.
DISAFFECTION IN BATTALIONS.
I ct T.t.r..hiirfT Vnv 9. l?nmnr. are
in circulation of the increasing disaf
fection in the- Fourteenth and Fifteenth
naval battalion at St, Petersburg.
NEW AMBASofDOR.
Indon, Nov. 25. Arthur Nicholson,
British ambassador to Madrid succeeds
Sir Charlc Harding a ambassador to
Russia,
J
RIOTERS PARADE CITY
Proceedings ot Zemstvo Congress and All Other De
velopments Pale Into Insignificance Compared
to Present Impending Disaster.
DEMAND FOR BETTER FOOD
Admiral Chouknln Unabl to Cop With the Situation and Ertn With Troop
at Hi Disposal Could do Nothing, a th Guna of the Rebel' Ship Sweep
the City, and Thus Dominate the Situation and Prevent Any Active Meai
ure Being Taken to Quell the Mutiny or Interfere With the Mutineer.
St Petersburg, Nov. 20. In view of the alarming newt received of the mu
tiny at Sebastopol, today the proceedings of the Zemstvo Congre at Moscow
and other development of the Russian situation have paled into insignifl.
canoe. The formidable revolt of the sailors of the fleet, the shore equippage
and the infantry garrison participating, appear to be beyond the power of
Yk Admiral lhwknin,wcommandet of the Black . Sea fie t, to control, aa.tho
dispatches y nothing of counter measures being taken, or of the attitude of
the other regiment of the regular garrison. ' Mutineers and riotous sailors
parading the city with the regular flags, without interference, may be pos
sible as was the case at Odessa now that the gun of the battleship Patereli
mon (formerly the Kniai Potemkine) and other veels of the fleet dominate tha
situation and prevent active measure being taken to quell the mutiny, even if
Admiral Chouknin ha efficient local troop at his disposal. The dispatches
aay nothing of the reaona for the mutiny or the demand of the mutineers, and
no details are obtainable at the admiralty, the conjecture being advanced that
demands for better food, and the release of the reservists might partly be re
sponsible. The force of the commissioned officer at Sebastopol Is now only
about one officer to over 400 men, and many of these are utterly incapable. The
revolutionary ferment, in ipite of the efforts of the officers, is known to have
affected a portion of the enlisted men in many of the regiments, and the Se
bastopol mutiny may be a spark necessary to et the flame of widespread re
volt. . 1
DISORDERS ARE SPREADING
Brought to Starvation, Peasant Pil
lage) and Burn,
Dmitrovsky, Russia, Nov. 25. Ag
rarian disorders in the Government of
Orel are spreading. The peasant in
many districts brought to the verge of
starvation by the crop failure, have
risen against estate owners and are
pilliaging and burning buildings and
seizing their crops. Among the estates
tlmt have suffered, Is that of Prince Or
lolf. Schiff Aid Plan to Arm the Jew.
New York, Nov. 25. Jacob H. Schiff
yesterday sent his check for 100 to the
Jewish Defense Association, en East
Side organization which is collecting
money to arm the Jews in Russia. This
movement has heretofore been opposed
by their uptown co-religionists, says the
Tribune, but Eastsider believe that
Mr. SchifPa contribution will be follow
ed by others from those who have so
far concerned themselves only with the
succor of the victims. The general re
lief fund reached $798,084 yesterday.
. Strike Disorder Continue,
Moscow, Nov. 25. Strike disorder
continue here, and several factories were
plundered tonight
SURGEON KILLED
ON DUTY
New York, Nov. 25. Dr. Clarence
Barlew, ambulance surgeon of the
Roosevelt hospital wt killed while on
duty tonight in his ambulance. A pon
derous sightseeing automobile struck
ftT MERC!
minis
WITHOUT INTERFERENCE
BELIEVED TO BE THE CAUSE
HO DRUNKER FROLIC
Outbreak at Sebastopol Unlike One at
Cronstadt
St. Petersburg, Nov. 26. The out
break at Sebastopol is no drunken fro!
ic, aa waa the one at Cronstadt, but is
a seriously planned revolutionary de
monstration. The tone of the official statement issu
ed at the admiralty tonight, declares
the sailors and several units of troop
re assembling under the direct super
vision of the Socialists propaganda.
The situation is serious, although ac
cording to reports received this even
ing, no attempts have wen made to pil
lage. Crimes Charged to Cossacks.
Saratoff, Nov. 25. The local Zemstvo
is protesting to, Governor General Sak
haroff against the cruelty and violence
of the Cossacks, who axe charged with
assaulting women. Th provincial prisons
are full of arrested peasant.
Disorders Ar Alarming,
Smolensk, Nov. 25. Even official re
ports take the most alarming view of
the Agrarian disorders. In several dis
trict of this Government the troops are
inadequate and the Inhabitant of tha
towns are hastily organising militia.
WHILE
IN AMBULANCE
the ambulance, which contained a wo
man patient; the driver and tha doctor.
The surgeon was thrown to the pave
ment and his skull fractured. He died
within ten minutes.
DESERT SHIP IN MID-OCEAN
AND ARE DROWNED. 0)
Vfc-toria, B. C, Nov. 23. The
steamer Aorangi, from Australia,
brought new of the drowning
of tlie grandson of the Marquis
of Ail-, nd two seamen of the
bark -loulan Hill of Sydney.
They de-erted the bark when 20
miles from Sandalwood island in 0)
the Celebes, using a small raft
0) to escape from the vessel. The 0)
raft is believed to have gone 0)
to piece.
ENGINEERS HOLD THEIR FINAL
MEETING AND DISCUSS REPORT
Committee Is Appointed to Draft th
Document After Which It Will Be
Presented for Sijnatures,
Wsshington, Nov. 23. At the final
meeting of the board of consulting en
gineers, the outline of the report which
the board is to make to the Isthmian
Canal Commission was discussed and a
committee consisting of Messrs. Davis,
Nelson, and Burr were appointed to
draft the document. The expectation
is that it will be completed by the
middle of June, when the document will
be sent to Europe for the signature of
the foreign representative.
A minority report, representing the
view of those opposed to a sea level
canal may be submitted to the commis
sion, but whether this will be done has
not yet beea determined.
The next meeting of the foreign mem
ber of board will probably take place
in January in a city to be designated
later. Brussels waa considered but no
decision baa been reached.
Scheme to From Company to
Hold Vanderbilt Lines.
FINANCIERS IN CONFERENCE
Social Affair at Country Homo of Wil
liam K, Vanderbilt Is Turned Into a
Financial Conference and Schema Is
Discussed of Forming Big Company.
New York, Nor. 25.-Well atreet
heard yesterday from a source it believ
es reliable, that while the visit of J. P.
Morgan, John D. Rockefeller, H. H. Hoi
lister, and other prominent financiers,
to the house of William K. Vanderbilt,
Thursday night, was intended as a pure
ly social affair, the assembled financiers
discussed informally the question of the
formation, as soon as financial condi
tions would warrant, of a holding com
pany to take over all the so-called Van
derbilt properties, including the & Y.
Central, the Lake Shore, the Michigan
Central, the Chicago & Northwestern,
the Boston & Albany, the Big Four and
all subsidary lines to the number of
forty.
TO MURDER IMPERIAL HOUSEHOLD
Project Was Discussed for th Murder
of Its Members.
New York, Nov. 23. A cable dispatch
to the Herald from Berlin says the Ber
liner Taggeblatt reports that St. Pet
ersburg police have intercepted corres-
ponderence between members of revo
lutionary party and it adherents
abroad, in which project waa discussed
for the murder of the members of the
imperial household. The letters were
ciphered, but neither the writer nor the
addressee has been arrested aa they ar
unknown.
FINS SF0R DODGERS OR SERVICE.
Warsaw, Nov. 25. The Governor Gen
eral, has instructed the province gov
ernors to immediately collect the fines
imposed on Jews for evading military
service.
ANOTIIERBIGHR
TI DEAD AND
IE
DYING
Fatalities of One Day in
the Football World. '
0NEVICTIMBUT FIFTEEN
Another High School Player Has
Rib Driven Thoou gh His
Heart
THIRD VICTIM HIT ON HEAD
William Moore, a Student of New York
University Dies of Cerebral Hemor
rhage and President of College Takes
Steps to Abolish th Game.
New York, Not. 23. Wm. Moore,
right halfback of the Union College
football team, died tonight of Injuries
received in today' game with the New
York University. He was 19 years old
and lived at Schenectady, N. Y.
Moore waa knocked unconscious by a
blow on the "head while he waa carrying
the ball and bucking the line. He died
of cerebral hemorrhage.
VIMUWIIVI UCUIJ 4NU fUWUKftCII, VI
New York University, tonight sent the
following telegram to President Eliot of
Harvard:
"May I not request, in view of the
tragedy on Ohio field today, that you
will invite a meeting of the University
and College president and under take
the reform or abilition of football."
Rib Driven Throng a Heart
Rockford, Ind., Nov. 25. Carl Os
borne, 19 years old was killed in a foot
ball game between the Marshall ant
Bellmore High school team today. One
of his ribs was driveh through hie
heart
Paralysed and Will Die.
Sedaia, Mo, Nov. 23. Robert Brown,
15 years old wss fatally injured play
ing football today. He waa paralysed
from the neck down, and haa not spoken
since he waa hurt.
Portland Boy Chosen.
Stanford University, Not! 25. E. B.
(Continued on page 8.)
FOOTBALL HAS OUTGROWN
ITS USEFULNESS.
San Francio, Nov. 23. Presi-
dent Benjamin Ide Wheeler, of
the University of California in
an address to the students yes-
terday, discussed football and
used very plain words. Among 4
other thing, he declared the
promised reforms had never
come. He said: "The game haa
outgrown its intention. The
trouble with it is that it ia too
highly specialized for the aver-
sge student. Men have to be in
e an artificial stage of preservation
to play the game aa it is played
today. I never objected to it on 4
0 the ground that it Is rough, but
that it ia not in the sphere of
usefulness for the ordinary stu-
dent The great trouble is that
the game is in the hands of a
select appointed, self organized
committee of rules. I refer to
a Mr. Camp and his assistants.
They have promised reform but
v have done nothing. Now college
a president have lost patience. We
will revise the rules ourselves
and the changea we make will O
0 be radical"