The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, April 02, 1906, Image 1

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UOLIttHKt FULL AS800IATK0 MPOHT
O0VER8 THE MOBNINQ FIELD ON THE LOWCFi COLUMBIAN
VOLUME LXI NO. 11 :J
ASTORIA. OREGON MONDAY. A PHIL 2 1906
PRICE FIVE CENTS
. i"
DOWIE
ELIJAH II BMIB
It SECT IE IHIIIDED
Five Thousand Adheranls to Zion City, Including
Leader's Wife and Son Denounce Dowie
High Priest Declared Insane.
VOLIVA IS NAMED AS
CHURCH HOLDS MEETING YESTERDAY AND DEPOSES BEWHISKERED
PROPHET WIFE OF DOWIE SAYS HE IS CRAZY-D0W1E
IS IN MEXICO AND SEND3 EIGHT-HUNDRED-WORD
TELEGRAM DEPOSING OFFICIALS.
' CHICAGO, April i At t meeting of
5000 adherents to the Christian Catholic
church la Zion City, John Alexander
Dowie'i authority waa repudiated, and
Wilbur Glenn Voliva, who for tome time
baa been conducting; th aflaira of the
church, wu elected h't successor. Mrs.
Dowie alto repudiated her husband, and
their ton, CUtMune Dowie, hat catt hit
lot with hia mother and Voliva,
Dowie Denounced.
CHICAGO, April I (Special) - Mint of
tin' niliiiiil of the rlnm'li wen- jirpsi-iit
nt the ini-i't iii iiml Ifcittlo denounc
ed by iiuiny of the.c a liiuinj: deceived
th K-iil' mill having wiiiti'il money
in (ttaj;amc, Tin- meeting, however,
rcfiied to linlil llmt he knowingly en
ed, nml John . SjM"ti-h r, IntlniT over
seer, nml mice 'rninl in command tn
iKiwio. w lict hii recently i'him'i pre
empt"! ilv l-ln rI Ilouie insane.
Mr. iKiwio in 1111 nddtc-., iili iii
belli llii declination, Tin- - W "ll"
of I lie Hiillmiil) nf llowie followed the
receipt today of nit eight hundred word
telegram from Jinttle, who i in Mevii-o
In which lie peremptorily ot tiered the
FATAL MINERS' FIGHT
Six Pnnnsvlvania Miners Eneaite
in
, C.k 1 7 . . W Mad n,..I.AIta
riUI n UJl tuul sbheiw vug
Results to All Concerned.
CHARI.EROI, I'a., April l.-itne man
was shot to ileal h, two others are suf
fering front bullet wounds which are
expected to prove fatal, n third in
seriously cut, a fourth burned about
the hand nml face, and a fifth serious
ly Injured, an the result of a fight of
' milieu iu the wood half it mile cant of
.Twilight, ft mining village near here,
thin evening. The men uum'led over
n keg of beer. William Hart, who in
accused of killing Lewis Williams, tho
dead man, in being searched for by iv
posse,
DECLARE GENERAL STRIKE.
WARSAW, April 1. Tim revolution
ists have announced their intention tot
declare a general strike to prevent the
government, from obtaining a new loan.
MOVEMENT IS ON FOOT
TO INVADE VENEZUELA
NEW YORK, April 1. -The World to
morrow will say 0110 of the largest mer
chants in New York stiitl last night Unit
arrangements were being perfected here
nnd in Paris and London for tho Invas
ion of Venezuela which will annihilate.
Castro nnd open the country to Ameri
can capital and enterprise. A numbivr
of rich Now Yorkers aw said to bo in
terested in the movement, which will
involve tho employment of 15,000 sol
diers and the expenditure of $.r,000,000
in a campaign in which Castro will
either be expelled or destroyed and a
CAST
ELIJAH'S SUCCESSOR
iiimietliitle tljncharg of IVacon Granger,
the limutcial manager of ion, who ban
been one of the ruot aggressive lead
er ill the effort to place the affair of
tin church on a secure foundation,
Howie also announced in the telegram
lluil letter would follow In which
other official were mimed for deposi
tion. Tho meeting of the ifion City
council of twelve followed immediately
nml ileciile.l tn jilure the affair of the
church before the member ami nettle
for nil time the question of leadership.
This afternoon Volivu, amid the tleml
silence, n 11 nouiifi'it that be refused to
lenitive Cumber from ofiliv. Thin was
lilt publicly tiiimilinit'd defiance by
Volivu of tlif authority of Dowie. The
completion of Howie's overthrow fol
lowed immediately. One ufter imotlieiv
Spi-ii'licr, Mrs. Dowie, and other de
nounced nml repudiated the authority
1. till leadership of Do ie. Although
j Howie.' authority ill I lie t Inn ell in thu
j repiidiiitetl scores of industries and
j lioiiif. in Zimi City stand upon laud
the title- of which ret in Howie
I name,
WILL PAY THE SCALE
Indications That Soft Coal Operators in
Western Pennsylvania Will
Pay the 1903 Scale,
I'lTTSlUltC. April l,lipa(chen
from the noft eoul region tonight indi
cate an itlmont general agreement of the
operators of Western Pennsylvania to
pay the 11HKI ncale. With notices post
ed at 11 majority of the mines aniinnno
iug the granting of tho scale, the strike
in the soft roal field has limt, the threat
ening ntpeet that ha miiTotinded it
since last .'miliary, Despite these an
nouncement it was announced from
JoluiKiown today that a thousand or
more union miner will make a demon
stration nt the mines of the Berwind
White Coal Company at Windber to
morrow in an effort- to get non-union
minds to come into the union.
ARRIVED IN CUBA.
HAVANA, April l.-Mr. Roosevelt
anil children urrived today.
native Venezuelan statesman installed
us successor. Carlos R. Euegerdo, Vene
zuelan consul in New York, said Inst
night that he had heard of such nn ex
pedition, but waa nimble to learn any
thing definite- about it. The consul in
quired eagerly as to the point which the
expedition Mas to sail from. The expe
dition is to sot out shortly from Europe
in three largo steamships. They are to
carry about 5000 volunteers, 8000 Mau
sers, 24000 cartridges, eight rapid-fire
guns, 1000 swords, 5000 revolvers 3000
machetes and other supplies.
ou
00000000000000000 0000000000000000000
0 SHIP C, F. SARGENT ALMOST SINKS. Oj
0 Oj
O NAN' FRANCISCO, April L-- The C. F. Hurgent, from Astoria to Oj
0 New York, with a cargo of lumber put into tbi pott today leaking, Oj
O Thirty four inches- of water were in her hold. She met n succession of Oj
O gales and on March 19th ran into a hurricane The, storm threw the Oi
O Sargent 011 her Ih-biii ends, and shifted her ctirgo, strained the ve-el Oj
O ll over and started the plank on the deck m-xt to the waterways. The 0
0 wind 11U0 carried away the forward biU which hold the main topmast it
O stay, cunning the vessel to leak about six inches per hour. The crew O
0 refused to .'o any further so the veel put into ben for repairs. 0
ooooooooobooooooo 0000000000000000000
TILLMAN WILL OPPOSE
"Pitchfork" Tillman States That
Will Fight Proposed Roosevelt
Amendment to Rate Bill.
He
WASHINGTON, April I. Senator
Tillman stated tonight that lie was not
satisfied with the RtMi-evi-lt court of
review amendment to the milrotid rate
bill and would oppose it on the floor
of the Senate, He said he did not be
lieve half a down iVtnoeratie colleagues
would support it. Tillman does not
think the amendment provides ade
quately that the commission's rate shall
"tand in effect pending litigation. Till
man and a number of Democratic Sena
tor orgue that the failure to provide
adequately against a susitcnsion of the
rate operates to nullify the objects for
which the legislation is desired.
WEEK'S FORECAST
Senate Will Consider the Rail
road Rate Bill.
HOUSE HAS BUSY WEEK AHEAD
Crisis in Coal Mining Industry is Reach
edBituminous Miners Will Work
Where Scale of 1903 Has
Been Agreed To.
WASHINGTON. D- C, April l.-The
following is 11 forecast of the events
this week:
Tho railroad rale bill will continue to
occupy the Senate to the exclusion of
almost all the other subjects. The bill
will be taken up today as soon as the
routine business is disposed of and
Senator Long will introduce nn amend
ment agreed upon at the conference of
the friends of the bill with the Presi
dent 1111 Saturday. Should the expecta
tion of the friend of the bill lie realized
a vote upon the measure will be reach
ed much earlier than was anticipated
Friday.
In the House the program is short as
to subjects, but full as to legislative
work. Monday will be suspension day
and the bills on the calendar will be
missed. Tuesday a bill providing for
government aid in the suppression of
yellow tever will lie in social oraer
Wednesday the post office appropriation
bill will be considered and will have the
right of way until the end of the week.
The crisis in the coal mining indus
try i reached. In the bituminous field
the miners will stay at work where the
scale of 1 0011 is agreed to, but where
the demands are not met there will be
a strike. The anthracite miners and
operators will meet Tuesday for a fur
ther conference on the scale. Pending
the outcome the miners will not return
to work. The operator have adopted a
conciliatory tone at the mines and dis
turbances are not anticipated.
The French coal strike has taken on
a serious aspect and tho government is
taking part in quelling the disturbances
which will undoubtedly continue this
week.
THE OREGON ARRIVES
Famous Old Battleship Reaches San
Francisco After Long Stay in
the Orient.
SAN FRANCISCO, April 1. The bat
tleship Oregon reached here today from
Manila. After a short stay here the
Oregon will go to Bremerton for re
pairs, Entering ; this port the Oregon
encountered heavy weather.
KILLED BY AN AUTO
Automoble Strikes Two Women Killing
One and Fataly Injuring the
OtherAuto Disappears.
NEW YORK, April I .--Mr. Alvina
Stern of St. Imi and her sistpr, Mrs.
.. Kuelilcr, of New Rocliellc, were
-truck by an automobile today. Mrs.
Stern died tonight of her injuries and
her sister wa probably fatally hurt.
Mr, Stern came to attend the celebra
tion of her sister's seventy-third birth
flay. The women were hurled with ter
rific force against the tttone abutments
of the railroad bridge. After the acci
dent the auto, which contained two men
and three women dro)ve away at a
rapid rate. The police say they have
the number and are tracing the own
ership. Yale Students and Police Have
Fierce Fight
POLICE ROUGHLY HANDLED
Students and Town Toughs in New Ha
ven Clash and Police Intervene,
Receiving Harsh Treatment at
the Collegians' Hands.
NKW HAVEN, April L Police in
quiry i being made into a disturbance
today just outside, the police head
quarters in which scores of Yale under
gtwduates are thought to have taken
part. Of late there has been a recrude
sencc of "Town and Gown" fights, but
none werc( serious enough for police
iutcventiou untl tioday Tpon th
outbreak a squad of police endeavored
to disperse the crowd which numbered
everal hundred men and boys. The
officers were swept aside and roughly
handled until they dKpw their clubs and
drove the disturtjers onto New Haven
Green. Quiet wa not restored until the
hotel proprietor promised to bail out
four students arrested. One student
was picked up unconscious after the
jlght. The police are not certain wheth
er tho trouble was the result of a ngnt
between the student factions or an at
tempt of the students to "Rush" a
crowd of townspeople. Several women
were caught in the scrimmage and bad
ly jostled.
CHINESE OUTBREAK LOCAL.
LONDON, April 1. The Telegraph's
Tokio correspondent says Premier Sai
onji regard the outbreak in China as
purely local and not indicative of an
a nti-foreign spirit in the counsels of
the governing authorities. The premier
also stated that Manchuria is being
evacuated with reasonable rapidity both
by the Russians nnd the Japanese and
when this is concluded Manchuria will
be thrown open to tho industry of all
nations.
OPERATORS WILL ACCEDE.
nilCAC.O, April 1. According to re
ports received from Illinois and In
diana a majority of the operators show
a disposition to accede to the demand of
the 1903 scale.
NEWSBOY TURNS TURTLE.
EUREKA. Apr. 1. Steamer Newsboy,
ashore nt the enrtanec to the harbor,
turned turtle tonight. An effort will
be made to drag her into the harbor.
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica, April 1.
Llccnsiado Cleto Gonzales Viquez today
was elected resident of Costa Rica.
RASE
ROUGH
HOUSE
RUSSIAN PRELIMINARY
ELECTIONS OCCUR TODAY
St. Petersburg ana Other
Electors to the National Parliament Ru
mors of Trouble Are in Circulation.
FATHER GAPON DEMANDS HE BE GIVEN IRIAL
GAPON WRITES TO PROCURATOR ASKING THAT HE BE TRIED IN
ORDER TO LEGALIZE HIS STATUS, OR IF GUILTY, THAT HE
BE CONDEMNED FATHER JOHN OF CRONSTADT IS
ASSAULTED AT THE ALTAR.
ST. PETFJISBURG, April l.-Tomor-row
the city of St. Petersburg will
choose electors for the municipal con
gress which will in turn elect six mem
Iters to the national parliament. Many
rumors are afloat that the revolution
ists intend to create disorders and throw
bombs in the polling places with the
purpose of discrediting the elections,
but the authorities declare nothing of
the sort will take place.
Candidates Arrested.
ODESSA, April 1. On the eve of the
preliminary elections all the sixty-six
candidates were arrested because they
displayed too liberal tendencies and the
authorities have directed the voter to
chooe candidates belonging to the re
actionary parties. Governor Kaulbars
WILL SUSPEND LABOR
Anthracite Mines Will be Almost Wholly
Suspended Today Because
of the Strike.
PHILADELPHIA, April l.-Indiea
tions are that work in the anthracite
mines will be almost wholly suspended.
The mine owners generally intend to
keen the mines rcadv for work tomor
row, but except a sufficient number of
men to keep the engines arid pumps
working, there is little likelihood of any
response.
GERMANY TO FORTIFY PLACE.
Conditions Changed in Far East Since
the' War.
BERLIN, April 1. Admiral von Tir-
nitz. secretary of state for the navy,
has just made an important announce
ment on the future of Kao Chau. He
says that the government will strength
en n well as extend the fortifications,
as the situation in the far east had un
doubtedly been changed, owing to the
result of the Russo-Japanese war. lite
government considered it necessary to
strengthen the fortifications, so that ail
attacks from seaward could be repell
ed, and also that the German settlement
should be amply protected against any
land attack which might result from an
anti-foreign rising in China.
OUTCOME OF MOROCCAN
CONFERENCE SATISFACTORY
PARIS, April 1 The Moroccan agree
ment is hailed with satisfaction by offic
ials and by the press which is weary of
the prolonged controversy and the dis
turbing possibilities of war. The offic
ial view is that France secures a fair
degree of success. However, it is recog
nized that neither France nor Germany
got all they wanted. France's desire
to control the police is partially real
ized in allowing her to police the im
portant Atlantic ports, which Germany
ZIOB
Cities to Choose Their
has prohibited all election meeting al
leging he fears disorders.
Capon Wants a Trial.
ST. PETERSBURG, April 1. Father
Gapon in a letter to the procurator de
mands that he be put on trial in order
to legalize his statu or, if guilty m
condemned. '
Priest is Attacked.
CRONSTADT, April 1. Father John
John Sargicff, better known as Father
John of Cronstadt, was attacked in the
Cathedral today while descending from
the altar to administer a sacrament.
The assailant struck at him with a
loaded cane, but Father John dodged
the blow. The man was arrested. The
penalty for a violation of the sacra
ment is death.
TWO TRAINS COLLIDE
Brakes Fail to Work and Passenger
Train Crashes Into Another
Twenty-nine Are Injured. ,
ANNAPOLIS, Mo., April l.-The
north-bound passenger train on the
Iron Mountain road while standing at
the station this afternoon was run in
to by a south-bound passenger. Twenty-nine
persons were injured, four ser
iously. It is stated the brakes on the
southbound failed to work.
MINISTER IS ASSAULTED.
NEW YORK, April 1. A mysterious
attempt at Eastport was made to mur
der Rev. Kopp, pastor of the German
Lutheran church while on his way to
church. It is, believed a hatchet was
used in the attempt and such an imple
ment covered with blood was later found
in the home of Albeit Depaul, organist
of the church. Depaul, whose wife is
choir leader, is missing. Kopp's condi
tion is critical.
TRAIN IS WRECKED.
SACRAMENTO, April 1. There was
a wreck on the Central Pacific near
Cape Horn today. Nobody was hurt.
Two ears went into the ditch, and the
entire train ran about one hundred
yards on the ties. .
was suspected of coveting and also
with her ally, Spain to police Tangier
and Casa Blanea. On the other hand it
is thought Germany's desire to inter
nationalize Morocco is partialy realized
as the police are subordinate to an in
spector who will report to the diplo
matic corps. Thus both countries are
in a measure successful, but each is so
safe guarded that neither is able to
claim victory. Officials consider the
agreement assures the preservation of
the peace of Europe.
. ,Y