mflu UlUtHIt PUlUAttOOIATID ! RTI0' UOVMS THE MORNINQ FIILO ON THB LOWf ft OOLUMBIAil VOLUME LXI NO. 207 ASTORIA, OREGON, SUNDAY, OCTOBER ,7 J90G PRICE FIVE CENTS J o I 3 I HILL TALKS AT CHICAGO As Is His Custom, Tells a Convincing Talc. tin cr for mora trok, mor engine, more car and more facilities of at kind. To "oonlruct the will require many hundred of million of dollar. Money Invented la railway expect a fulr return oa the investment, and to Insure this, In vlow of prompt conJI tlon, and to prevent the force of ad vanclng social evolution becoming de tructlve, well ar creative, I the I itipreme problem, ' TRANSPORT SHERIDAN SAFE. PROPIIETOTTERANCES Tells of (he Probable Exhaustion of National Supply for Industries. j REVERSION TO SOIL NEXT Without farther Mishap Will Star la Commission. HONOLULU, Oct, e.-The trsnsport Sheridan which wa refloated today ha been successfully docked her. Th Sheridan wa towed off Pearl ITarbor beach by tba tug Irqotiola, Manning nd Buford, Scow were attached to each eld of the Sheridan to prevent eapsUlng. The Sheridan' pump are kept constantly working. Captain Hum phrey says that be ! u yet unable to ascertain the amount of damage done, but hope to repair the vel her uffklntJy to proceed under bcr own tm to Ban Francisco, She I not leaking seriously, but her engine tr belpleu at present. Future Hold Some Dismal Certalatle Imitative Cheap Labor Tran- portatlon at Home Ifeit Vital Question in Commerce, MARINE MYSTERY EXPLAINED. Japaneie Attribute. Lo of Seating Steamer to Russian. VICTORIA, Oct. 6 Japanese new paper report the clearing up of the niysterlout disappearance of the seal I in, fjnmr fililnnma Mrn liut iiim UilCAW, Oct. j. uiu wa. tne - - fc j, principal apeaker at a banquet given port, fln,!jm ,t a piaM c,jjed Zobaroff at the Auditorium, under the auspices on the coast of Kamchatka the charred of the Commercial Aoeiatlon. tonkbt. remain 0f the lt ae.ler and the skel About 7M person were present. Sir of her crew, all of whom were Tboma Llpton wa one of the chid presumably murdered. The Jlyetsu's meet. icrew believe that tne steamer wa nr Mr. Hill, In th court of hi addres. Pd wane at ancnor by tne kumum iUted that by the middle of the pre- and her crew all murdered. nt wnturv thlt eoiintr would hava a J In the absence of incontrovertible population of 200,000,000 and declared 1 proof of loth the hip Identity and the entll problem I to determine the cauws of hr lo, it it improbable CUP STAYS N FRANCE Railway Speed Maintained Over Ulacadam Road. RECORDS ARE BROKEN Only five car finished the race, but there were 14 of the 17 car that atari ei running at tne time the race wa declared off, which wa done a oon a Clemm had won (fourth place. It- wa with the greatest effort that the crowd were kept back from the oours during the lat lap. Without re gard to personal afety, they swarmed over th road, giving way only when the fast flying machine were 100 yard away., ' . : While j ranee carried away premier honor of the race, Joseph Tracey, of the American team, had the satisfa tlon of registering the fattest lap made, On bl fifth round,"' Tracey drove the 29.7 mile In the remarkable time of 28.21. Tracy suffered severely from tire trouble in the first few rounds, and that cost him dear. He was on hi ninth lap when the race wa called off. Three First Places Go to Foreign! Drivers But Fastest Mile to American. VINCENT ST. JOHN RELEASED. MANY SPECTATORS INJURED i io-Horse-power French Machine Prove Superior in the World' Greatest Representative Gath ing of Racing Auto. Colorado Fail to Convict Miner, Evi dene Being Insufficient. GRAND JUNCTION, Colo.. Oct. 6.- Plstrlct Judge Steven today dismissed the charge of murder against Vincent St John, formerly president of the Tellurlde, Colorado, Miner' Union, and later of the union in the Coeur d'Alene district, after District Attorney Slig bad announced that the state could not secure sufficient evidence to convict hirn. St. John wa charged with mur der in connection with the Tellurlde riot in 1900, in which Benjamin Burn- ham , was killed. After the Steunen- berg murder St. John wa arrested, charged with complicity in that crime, but was soon released. lie was then re-arrested and brought to Colorado. ALASKA EXODUS BEGINS. that any action will be taken by the Japanese government. where tbee people will And profitable employment. mil asierteu mat our puwio ianu were practically exhausted and that even when the present plans of Irriga tlon were completed land would be pro' ylded for only seven or eicht million more people. He believe that our iron and coal will begin to be exhausted within the next fifty yeart h rt Retribution as Spontaneous as JUSTICE FOR ENDS Crime, Rewards Outrage. SOUTHLAND'S OLD LEGACY Negroes' Gross Criminal Instinct Dei' olatea Two More Home, and Re sult in Their Death by Rope and Fire. tba our forest are rapidly going and our mineral oil supply will not last, He say w cannot continue our pre ent methods of trad because the min erals of the cround will not recreate themselves. With coming million to provide for, he ays, our present ransacking of gov ernment storehouses to see what can be sent over sea mutt be sharply changed to the consideration of th preservation of what is. Upon the cultivation of the soil all our- varied commercial activity is main ly built and upon It, be declares, de pend th future of mankind. Mr mil went nn In show that the oil of the country is becoming Impov MOBILE, Ala, Oct. 6.-Two hundred erlshed; our forest are being eut down masked men mot Sheriff Power with that sun may bake It and floods scour two negroes, charged with assault, at t into- he oceans the same grain has KthMtiHm iwit,h three niile8 north of been raised upon it year after year, reducing it productive capacity until Moblle' 00 the Soutl,ern took the decline in ome case is . fifty per prisoners away from Mm and hanged cent. : I them on the pot No other were hurt. of reform iu the method of cultivation would double the agricultural produo tlon and add five or six billion of dob lars to our national, wealth, while the adoption of the email-farm principle would give wonderful additional in crease. The costliest error, he believes, will be in the clinging to our present dclu lon that we are to Increase our ex port and Ite on the profits of our foreign markets. He predicts the time when we shall need all our field prod' uct at home j when our mines will not yield, and when the Imitative natives and cheap labor In the Orient, equipped with our machinery, will vanquish us in all commercial pursuits, ' Every nation, he says, which enjoy prosperity and has a healthy national vigor, derives it from the soil. All other industries cluster about ngrloul ture as do the branches of a, tree, Next to productivity of soil in Im portance, Mr, Hill thinks the. question of transportation is greatest. More lines are necessary. Already there is rising NEW YORK, Oct. fl. The automobile race for the Venderbllt Cup on Long Island today had an unfortunate bum Iter of accidents. These were due to the insatiable curiosity of the people to get a better view of the racer. Gold and Miner Arrive From the4 North (Heavy 1vrriers placed ti bold back Country, the crowda were crushed like eggshells and vast crowds thronged onto the SEATTLE, Oct. 6. Five steamships, course. No attention -was paid to the bringing a total of $971,000 gold and warning trumpet announcing the ap- 1.038 passengers, arrived today from proach of the racers and often vehicles Alaska; Two steamer were from Nome, traveling ninety miles an hour would one from Valdea and two from South be less than one hundred yards away, eastern Alaska. when the crowd, like an Inverted wedge. GENEROSITY MISAPPLIED Free Seed Bureau Desig nated as a Farce. IS INSULT NOT FAVOR Beneficiaries Consider Gifts More ' Valuable for Fuel Than for Culture. ' SYSTEM AROUSES ANTAGONISM Three-quarter of a Million Yearly Ex pense Wasted to Supply Fanners With Worthies Seed a a Sop For Political Patronage. COMMITTEE ACTS Intent to Mislead Policy Holders is Frustrated. - would press back and allow the mo torist to dash by. Near a particularly dangerous turn, known as Knig cor ner, two machine had flashed by, when Bert L. Oruner, of Paasaic, New Jer sey, ventured out into the road to get a better view of the approaching ma chines. With a rush and roar a French car driven by Elliott F. Shephard, son of Colonel B. F. Shephard, and grand on of the late W. K. Vanderbilt, dashed, into Gruner, hurling him high in the air and many yard distant. When picked up the man wa dead. Shephard attempted to continue the race, but wa completely unnerved and could not finish the Ian. Josenh Tra cey eraheMnto a crowd of men and staw omnm vmauM Enjoinea to FOR ADMINISTRATION POLICY mingham ifor safekeeping and were be Ing brought to Mobile for trial. A tremendou crowd surrounded the railroad station during . the ' morning and when the report of the lyncliing of the negroe prevailed, the greatest ex cuement prevailea. Tne crowd was apparently dissatisfied with the method of execution, hanging, and a mob has departed for the ecene, with the de dared Intention of burning the bodies, r' JAPANESE POACHERS. VICTORIA, B. 0 Oct. O.-Advlces from Japan state that the crew of the scaling schooners Toyel Maru No. 3 and Daifuku Maru seised by a Russian war ship off Copper Island have returnred to Japan. The captains and mates were imprisoned by the Russians at retropavlovsk, whcr the confiscated schooners are lying, The sealers claim they put in under the lee of Copper Island where the Russian rookeries are located merely to escape the heavy weather and deny any poaching intent. boy, seriously injuring one boy and lightly hurting several other. Dr. Weilsehott lost control of his big 120- horse power Italian machine in the first lap and ran down two bicyclists, then plunged down a thirty-foot em bankment. No one was seriously hurt. Several person were run down by tour ing cars Jn the crush going to and re turning (from- the race. The race to day wa won by Louis Wagner, In a French machine, and the next contest for the cup will probably take place in France, Of the seventeen car which af awf A Ami., flvfh VA4 t), a3et Umn and fourteen were still running. Louis Wagner, In a 110-horse power French car, today won the third international autonobile road race for the William K. Vanderbilt, J., cup, completing the distance of 297.1 miles in 290 minutes, 10 2-6 seconds, or at the rate of more than a mile a min ute. Vincense Lancia,' in a 120-horse-power Italian car, was second in 291 minutes, 28 4-5 seconds. ; Antlonino Duray, In a 120-horse-pow er French car, was third, in 293 min uts 44 45 seconds. Albert Clement, in a 100-horse-power French car-, was fourth, In 301 minutes 59 4-5 seconds, j ' . Cainilo Jenatzy, in a 120-horse-power Gorman car, was fifth, in 304 minuteB, 38 seconds. f Lancia actually finished the course about 3 minutes ahead of Wagner, who, however, started six minutes later than big rival, and bnd that much mar- n at the finish, Prohibit Use of Ballot Foisted on Policy Holder With Obvious Intent to Deceive. NEW YORK, Oct. 0 A circular, let ter wa mailed today by Manager Scrugham of the International Policy HolderV committee to every state su perintendent of insurance in the Un ion, informing them that the Mutual Life is sending out ballot bearing only "Administration ticket" to policy-hold er in advance of the official ballots, State insurance officials are asked to prohibit the use of these slips on the ground of violation of insurance law and the intent to mislead policy-hold era.'" ,; . " . SHOT HIS FRIEND. Liquor Drive a Vancouver Soldier to Commit Murder. PORTLAND, Oct. 6. A special to the Oregonian, from Vancouver, Wash., states that Thomas Anderson, of Com pany M, Fourteenth Infantry, fatally shot Corporal Anthony Brider of the same company, this afternoon, in a sa loon' on Main street. Brider died of his wbunds an hour later. Sergeant White head, of Company K, arrested 'Ander son, n& he will be turned over to the civil authorities tomorrow, Brider and Anderson have been fast friend hither to. WASHINGTON, Oct. 6. "Behold bow great a fire a little flame kindletb, quoted a Long Island farmer of a re ligious turn of mind a few days ago, when be saw about-tea thousand pack ages of government "free seeds" being burned in the yard of a neighbor In one of the suburb of Brooklyn. "Why are you burning the seeds t he asked. "Because they are- worthless, 5 w the reply. The farmer thoroughly agreed with this etateemnt, but he thought they might ' be made useful. "What will you sell them forf he asked. "You can have all you can carry away for half a dollar,? was the reply. o he loaded up a bushel bag and took it into New York. Here he told bis story to a seed dealer, with the result that those despised peeds will form one of the principal exhibit in the anti-iree seed campaign when Congress reassem bies. Xbese ten thousand or more packages of seeds wnich a generous government forced upon unwilling Long Island farmers were not being destroyed because they were old or worm eaten, a was once the case. They were prob ably good enough in their way, but they were not good enough for the Long Island truck farmers, although especial ly designed for truckster. They were destroyed because they were of the commonest varieties, many of them be ing seeds that had been on the mar ket for twenty or thirty years. In fact, some M them, are so old that they have been discarded by the more enterprising seedsmen for newer and improved varieties, and the only place they are obtainable is at the Depart ment of Agriculture, which sends them out in the Congressional Free Seed dis tribution as "new, rare and valuable" seeds. At one time the free seed dis tribution was a joke, but it has become a serious matter, for Congress is wast ing a quarter million dollars yearly in this manner, to say nothing of the $250, 000 it costs the post office department to hanndle them. The farmers are getting very tired of the farce. The up-to-date and prosperous farmer considers it an insult to his intelligence for a member of congress to send him a five cent pack age of the same kind of seed bis fath er planted twenty years ago and at tempt to palm it off on him a some thing "new, rare and valuable." knows when it was first presented. In view of these facts, which will be pre sented to Congress, it is scarcely possi ble that it will continue the fiction that it is tending out 'new, rare and valuable seeds, even if It continue the distribution In the face of the ridicule heaped upon it by the agricultural and dally press, and the; condemnation ex pressed by farmer and their organiza tion. Senator Clark, who ha represented Wyoming In the United States Senate during the past! eighteen years, and who is one of the Republican leader in politics in the Northwest, passed through Washington tbis week on hi way to the New England states. On the death of the late Senator Hoar, of Massachusetts, (followed by that of Senator Piatt, of Connecticut, Senaton Clark succeeded to the chairmanship of the Committee on Judiciary, and in that position ha demonstrated his legal ability to' the gratification of hi many friends. ' Speaking of politic, while here. Senator Clarlc said: 'The continued popularity of Mr. Roosevelt in the Northwestern State will have much to do in eweeping Col orado and Montana back into the Re publican column this fall ( resulting in the retirement of Senators Patterson of Colorado, and Clark of Montana. It is very prbable that the "smelter, king," Mr. Gugenheim, will succeed Mr. Pat terson, and former Senator Lee Mantle or Representative Dixon will come to the Senate instead of Mr. Clark' of Montana. The Northwest Is a much in favc of Mr. Roosevelt a It ever was, if not more so. The people there - would like to support him for another term. If he will not run again, they would support ans one of half a dozen candidates wbo might be nominated, but, of course, with less majorities than Mr. Roosevelt received. Vice President Fairbanks i very' well liked through the Northwest State." Fot the past week or ten day, the nerve of the army and navy have been taut to th limit over the Cuban situation. A usual, the ' preliminary (Continued from page 3) ORE MACON MESS Negro Insults Two Young White Women on Street. SHOOTS AT REMONSTRANTS I Arrested and Jailed and Jailed Stormed Mayor Exhausting AH Power He Possesses to Quell - ' the Trouble. To determine just how "new" these seebs are, which had been rescued from the flames, the seed '.dealers examined their catalogues with interesting re sults. It was found that one variety of parsnip, two of lettuce, three of turn ip, one of tomato, one of onion and two of radish seed had been catalogued by a New York firm in 1879. One of lettuce, one tomato, and one muskuielon came into use in 1884. Five other varieties of lettuce were introduced between 1875 and 1890. The newest variety of seed was an onion, introduced by a Phil adelphia firm In 1899, while the oldest was traced by thirty years, and no onei MACON, Oct. 6. About ten o'clock tonight Charles Adams and William Solomon, prominent young white men, while escorting two young women, were shot and seriously iniured bv a ne- I - - y - gro at the Fair Ground. The negro offensively pushed his way between the young women and their escort and when remonstrated with drew a revol- ver : and fired. Ter.r,,,rrr-."r? A stampede ensued among the blacks, when the white people began to threat en vengeance. The young women caught car and cabs and were taken rapidly to their home. 1 The negro was arrested and taken to jail, but a mob soon formed, and stormed the building. Vigorous effort) are being made to prevent trouble, the mayo rexercising all power at his command to this end. MURDEROUS INCIDENT. LOS ANGELES, Oct. 6A bold mur der on the streets occuiTed here today, when Eulogio Delgoa, a Mexican, was stabbed In the back by an unkonwn person and instantly killed, as he was riding a bicycle. The assassin was not caught. PACIFIC LEAGUE. , At Fresno San Francisco, 8j Fres no 8, (darkness). At Los Angeles Los Angeles, , Or; Portland, 1.