3 I1S (.). "0 r ' ;ULIMti;rULL AttOOIATIO IMPORT UOVf RS THK MORNINQ rtCLO ON TH1 LOWIft COLUMBIA VOLUME LXI NO. 194 ASTOKIA, OREGON, TUESDAY, JULY 24 1906 PRICE FIVE CENTS Jflifttttti JIl PEACE ENVOYS E Intcr-Parllamcntary Union Meets In London. AMERICA REPRESENTED Delegates of Twenty Nations Come Together to Discuss Vital Questions. BANNERMAN STIRS DELEGATES Aioumi Great Enthusiasm By Ssying, "The Parliament it Desd; Long Llv the Russian Par liament." LONDON, July 23,-Tb fourteenth conference of the Inter parliamentary Union opom-d today. representative of nearly emy nation being present. Frtmlef Bannerman addrd th delegate and during a auddent outburst of tothulm shouted The Russian Parliament la dead, long live tha llui alan Parliament Tha delegate cheered madly. The Russian delegate a nnon ne ed their withdrawal owing to the dlo lutton of their parliament. Tbla alon of the Interparliamentary Union ha been called to convene at tondon, July 2-1. In order to pa upon the re porta (lied in June by the two Commissions which were appointed at the BrueU session hut August. U waa conldwed wise to hare an extra ordinary seiion of the Union ao that It whole weight might be baric of the re quest for the convention of the Second Hague Conference lulo a permanent body, when this proposition I presented to the members of that conference next May. In the form of a report approved unanimously by the member of the in terparllamentary Commission. This, which will be of course. Import ant is the report of the commislson on a model arbitration treaty. That commis sion, like the one on International eon gress, is composed of very eminent men Its President la Ernest Von Plener, Ex Minister of Finance of Australia. Ho was for many years the leader of the German party In the Austrian Par llamant. This commission had to grapple with these problems! (1) How to draw a treaty of arbi tration which can be executed by all na tions, without holding the progressive countries back to tlie position of the lottst advanced powers. (2) How to draw a treaty which can hope to be approved by the president and senate of the United State, without forfeiting the favor of the great powers of Europe, that have adopted as their standard the Anglo-French treaty of ar bitration. This latter problem arose from the failure of tho Hay Treaties to meet with the failure of the United States In the foim in which they were negotiated. The Hay treat ica proposed to refer to arbitration all questions of a legal na ture provided they do not affect the vital Interest or the honor of either of the contracting powers, or the interests of a third power-. A subsequent clause was inserted which provided that when any particular controversy might arise a subsequent Agreement should be en tered into between the contracting pow ers, before resort could be had to the Court of Arbitration undor the terms of this treaty, The senate struck out the word "agreement" and substituted the word "treaty" and then passed the treaty thus emended by practically a unanimous vote, only nine senators objecting to the amendment. This amendment neces- CONVEN (Continued on page 8) RUSSIAN STOCKS AFFECTED. Dissolution of Parliament Causes Slump io Russian Securities on Bourse. PARIS. July W.-Tbe Russian situa tion nlmmiM the attention of the, French public and pre of Paris, and I pecul iarly apparent on the Bourse where a lump in Rulan securities almost caus ed a panic. Officials are cautious in crlt lelxlng the turn of events owing to political relation of France and Russia; hut Frenche sentiment universally con demn the dlqJutlon of the representa tive branch of Parliament. Members of the Hours urge calmness, declaring that If another week passe without an outbreak Russian securities will be trtngr than before, a the agitation Incident to th debates of Parliament wilt have been removed. EICHT HOUK LAW EXTENDED. DVSTFiR HAY, July 23.-By order of the President, the provMon of th 8 hour law ar extend to th nvay depart ment. BRITISH SYMPATHETIC. IjONDON. July 23.-A British address of sympathy with the Russian people and Parliament Is being circulated. Summer Season in Washington Pleases Subordinates. "ACTING SECRETARY" CHIEF Chief Clark of Bureau Chief Dote on Heat It Drive Chief Out and Enable Him to Rule th Ranch. ASTORIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash inifton. D .C. July 23. Tills is the sea on of the year when the government of the United State is In the hands of chief clerk and bureau chiefs. During nine month of the year these officials are merely moth that flutter about the me of creatnesa. Come the dog days and. Io, they themselves, burst forth into flame, about which other moths must flutter. The chief clerk and the bureau chief have not had their full share of glory the present summer, because some of the department heads are still detained in Washington by the press of important business. Another spell of acorching weather .though, like the one we had wo weeks ago, will send these cabinet ministers scurrying to mountain and seashore, and the reign of the subordi nnte will be complete. In each of the nine great department there is at-least one, and in most cases wo or three, assistant secretaries whose hit r it is to take the plnee of the absent denartment chief. This arrangement would work beautifully were it not for the fact that an assistant aecretnry oesn't like sweltering heat any better than a full-fledged Cabinet member, ami there generally Is Important business that takes him away from Washington in July and August. Now the chief clerk of the bureau chio ust dotes on heat, especially if it en ables him to aign official documents is "Antinir Secretary." The asnhalt on Pennsylvania avenue may run in rivu lets and the Washington monument all but collapse under the blistering rays, but the "Acting Secretary" la serene and niling. Sitting at the desk of the Cabinet member who rules his depart ment, door wide open so that all who pass may see he does his best to look the part, and messengers and minor rks are kept on the jump. His dig ,v sticks out like snail's eyes and Sam" or "Jack" who always address at other times as "Bill" or "Jim" make tho deferential bow and "Mr. Sec retary" is the form of their salutation. Some folks may growl ojid grumble and declnre Washington to be an inferno in dog days, but the "Acting Secretary" finds the climate hugely to his liking. CHANCE FOR CLERKS 1IA DEFIES Adopts Revolutionary Ad dress to People. CONVENE AT VIBERC Advises People Not to furnish Money and Troops to the Government. STOLYPIN CABINET CONFER Few Day May See Establishment of Provisional Government With En- Urged Council of Ministers Government Heed Advice. i COSSACKS THREATEN TO 4 KILL JEWS. , 4 ODESSA. July, 23.-Tonight the inhabitants are moving in masse through the center of the 4 town. The Cossacks bava declar- ed they will slaughter all Jewa 4 in Prokhorovakaya treet, where 4 ) one of their comrades, who wa 4 4) drunk, wa killed, a be brand- Ished a word houtlng " Death to 4J all Jews." 4 ST. PETERSBURG, July 23. The great news of today was the adoption of the address to the people by the depu ties to Parliament assembled at Viborg, the language of which with its revolu tionary demands, that the peope cease to furnish money and troops to the gov ernment and repudiate the further loans, affords pretext enough for the govern ment to lodge it author in the fortress, if it feel strong enough. A rumor spread tonight that thia course had been de cided upon. A larva crowd gathered at the Fin land tation tonight where the deputies were expected to arrive, but only a few appeared and they were not molested; neither wa there a demonstration. Copies of the appeal to the people are in the hands of all the St Petersburg news paper, but will scarcely be printed to morrow for the reason that a detach ment of police is posted at the door of every newspaper office in the city with order not to permit any paper to leave the buildings until authorized by the censor. The authorities hope by equally rig orous measure to prevent its publication in other cities, and in the meantime nullify the fears of the people as to the possible effect of the appeal. Establish Provisional Government A few days may witness the consti tution of a "Provisional Government" composed if an enlarged council of min isters with the inclusion of the conser vative members of the deposed lower house, the counsellors of the empire and men influential in tho life of the empire, ho enn be induced to accept'munstnes ithout portfolios and contribute their authority and advico to the hard pressed government. This is the solution, to hich Premier Stolypin and the members of his cabinet, who realize the enormous nature of the task of tiding over the country during the tempestuous era that is now dawning, are turning, and it was the subject of deliberation at a meeting of the cabinet last night, and agnins this afternoon. The Associated Press is informed that majority of the members have become converts to the idea. The Associated Press is also informed that a ukase will HUH GOVERNMENT be lsued fixing the date for the elections for parliament, for the first of Decem ber (Russian style) and that popular representation will not be abandoned. Meanwhile the maes of the Russian people, slow of thought and action, have not yet roused themselves to the gigantic upheaval, which is sure to follow the dissolution of their parliament. HOLDS LOVER'S CHILD Iff HER LAP AT TRIAL FULTO.Y, Mo., July 23,-The jury in the murder case of Mrs. Edmund Bailey, charged with being an accessory to the killing of Jay Lawder, whom her hus band shot, returned a verdict of acquittal today, after having been out 40 hours. Bailey was acquitted on Saturday. Bail ey, an employe in Lewder coal mine, shot Lawder dead upon learning of the intimacy existing between Lawder and Mr. Bailey. The reading of sensational letters written to Lawder by Mrs. Bailey was a feature of the trial. In her lap Mr. Bailey held an infant whose fath er, she te-tifled in the trial, was Lawder. BOILER PLANT BLOWS UP. PORTLAND, July 23.-A boiler fer tilizer plant in the suburbs blew up this afternoon killing Frank Pelton, aged 40, and injuring F. F. Leutz, an alleged de fective tank i said to be responsible for the explosion. ADDRESS TO PEOPLE Parliament Appeals to People to Resist Government. THEY SHOULD BE RULERS Urge People To Refute to Pay Taxea Until Popular Representation is Granted People Declared All Powerful ST. PETERSBURG, July 23. Per haps the most significant paragraph in the address to the people formulated at Viborg by members of the lower house is: "Citizens, stand up for your trampled on rights, for popular representation and for an anti-partial Parliament "Russia must not remain a day with out popular representation. You posses the means of acquiring it. The govern ment has the without assent of popular representatives no right to collect taxes from the people nor summon the people to military service; therefore, you are now the government The dissolution of Parliament waa justified in giving neith er money nor soldiers. "Should the government however con tract loans in order to procure funds, such loans will be invalid without the consent of the popular representatives, The Russian people will never acknowl edge thera and will not be called upon the pay them. "Accordingly until a popular repre sentative Parliament is summoned, do not give a Kopeo to the throne or a soldier- to the army. Be steadfast iu yonr refusal. No power can resist the united inflexible will of the people. Citizens in this obligatory and unavoid able struggle your representatives will be with you." - EXPLOSION; CARELESS SMOKER MOUNT UNION, Pa., July 23.-Four were killed and five injured in an ex plosion of powder and dynamite at the miners supply house of Jesse 0. Mc Ciain near Robertsdale. The careless ness of a miner smoking is believed to be the cause. Buildings falls; eight killed. SOUTH FARMINGHAM, Miss., July 23. By the collapse of a building being constructed here, eight are known to be dead and a dozen injured. A search may reveal further deaths as nearly forty workmen were in the building at the time of the collapse and ten are still missing. PLUNGES INTO LAKE Engine, Express, Smoking Car Disappear. FOURTEEN DROWNED Accident Occurs at Diamond Lake Thirty Miles From Spo kane Wash. MANY PASSENGERS ARE HURT Great Northern Passenger Plunge Down Sixty-Foot Embankment and is Engulfed in Waters of Diamond Lake, SPOKANE, July 23.-The engine, ex press car and smoking car of the Great Northern fast train, west-bound, are submerged in the deep waters of Dia mond Lake about 30 mile from Spokane. Nine men went down in the smoking car- and were drowned, and the engine crew are dead in deep water. As the train came through the portal of the tunnel the rails spread and the engine plunged down a 60-foot embank ment into the lake, and was followed by the express car and smoker. The other cars remained on the track. Their coup lings were unbroken. The wreck caught fire from illuminat ing gas flames but were extinguished. An unknown man in the day coach was probably fatally injured by the explosion of the gas tank. Diamond lake, though a small body f water, is about half a mile long, and known to be 300 feet deep in places, and it is thought the engine lies in 125 feet of water. List of Dead. ' Among the dead are: ED MUNSON, engineer. BELL fireman. CHARLES DANNER, mail clerk. GSORGE R. STICKLAND, express messenger. GEORGE CURTIS, a lumberman of Spokane. T. J. DOLBOW, 2101 E. Pacific ave nue, Spokane. ED NEWCOME, of the Surety Invest ment Company, is missing. List of Injured. Those seriously injured are: C. J. MOIflLLS, of Spokane, hands anl face burned. JOHN LORD, of Seattle, left hand cut, and face bruised and back hurt. J. DURBIN of Spokane, hands cut and otherwise badly injured. TOM WALNCH, of Spokane, fingers cut. ELMER E. HALL, of Colfax, right hand burned and face scalded. HENRY E. BYORTJM, of Minot, N. D , badly burned and hurt internally. Slight injured, a dozen. SAN FRANCISCO SCHOOLS OPEN. About Sixty Per Cent of Attendance Before Fire Register. SAN FRANCISCO, July 23.-The pub lic schools of San Francisco opened to day for the first time since the fire and were well attended. As nearly thirty. school buildings were ' destroyed, the schools in some of the districts are badly overcrowded and will be conducted on the half day session plan until more facilities are supplied. Conditions how ever are more favorable than had been expected by the authorities. School Director Oliver estimated that the regis tration is about 60 per cent of the chil dren registered before April 18. NEWSPAPERS COMMENT. Bannerman's Statement Before Inter parliamentary Congress Criticized. 'LONDON,' July 24. Newspapers this morning comment on Premier Campbell Bannerman's address before the inter Parliamentary Union and the reply to bi phrase, "The Russian Parliament is dead; long live the Russian Parliament." Conservative journal consider this lat ter undiplomatic, and indiscreet while others diplomatically correct the inter pretation b suit the Emperor of Russia while the Liberal organs characterize it as a blend of high courage and deep caution, and nothing over which diplo macy can stumble. Perry Norman in tha Daily Chronicle says that the phrase. considering by whom it was said and where, "Will echo round th world." KRETZER WILL GET PURSE. SEASIDE, Ore., July 23. As a reward for his heroism in rescuing Leah Cohen, the. little daughter of Leon Cohen, of Portland, from death by drowning in the breakers in front of the Hotel Moore, at this place last Thursday, a purse of $500 ha been presented to Harry Kret zer. The sum was given by residents and visitors, who are loud in their praise of Kretzer'a brave act. PLAN FOR CAMPAIGN Republican Congressional Cam paign Committee at Oyster Bay. TALKS WITH THE PRESIDENT Members of the Committee Confer Wita' President Roosevelt and Arrive at Complete Understanding; Head- ' quarters Are in New York OYSTER BAY, July 23-The president today entertained four members of the republican congressional campaign com mittee. The meeting was held prelimi nary to opening the headquarters of the committee in New York and to discuss fully the situation so that there will bs a complete understanding between tho President and the committee and party leaders. Those who attended were Speaker Cannon, Representative Sher man, Representative Loudenslagef, and Congressman McKinley. At the conclu sion of the conference Secretary Loeb on behalf of the President, said: "Plans for the congressional campaign were gone over generally and the Presi dent expressed himself as being in en tire accord with the committee." Chairman Sherman said: "The head quarters of the republican congressional camaign committee will be opened in the St. James building in New York next Wednesday. From that time the com mittee will take an active part in the campaign. The principal speakers of the campaign will be Secretary of War Taft; Secretary of the Treasury Shaw; Speaker Cannon; Senator Beveridge, and other senators. The campaign book is now in couwe of production but will not be completed for several weeks." HOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO BE THE ICE MAN? CINCINNATI, July 23. Fifteen in- dictments for restraint of trade in the matter of advancing the price of ice were returned by the grand jury today. Ten individuals and five firms are indicted. All are members of the ice dealers' ex change. SEVEN SUITS FILED. OMAHA, July. 23. Seven suits were filed in the federal court today against ranchmen in the western -part of the State to compel them to remove unlaw ful fences from the public domain. It it alleged 253,000 acres are illegally in closed. Several of the defendants are among those under indictments for con nection in alleged land frauds. .