' fUV '':''"V' ; ' jfll Jtwt atttti Stetonim.-. . UIHIIFmooimDMIII : OOV.M THt MORN.NO ritLO ON TH LOW.R OOLUM..A;. VOLUMELXI NO. 265 r ASTORIA, OREGON; SUNPAYOCTOBER 28. 1906 ' PRlCE FIVE CENTS , , . , : ; . . , ( . n.,.,rvnn I ' CORIELYOU TO RETIRE. ROOSEVELT FOR HUGHES Indorses Republican Can didate tor Governor. PRINCIPLES INVOLVED Says Hughes Stands for (he Same Principles Advocated By President. PUBLICATION IS AUTHORIZED Statement Believed to Strengthen Re publican! in New York, with a Ten deocy of Bringing the Inde pendent! Into Line. NEW YORK. OH. 27.-The first pub. lie utterance made by Prellent Roose velt, toiwhlng on the campaign In New York, waa conveyed to the pu1 Ho at a montr man meeting at Coo per Union tonJuht, In the form of an endowment of the .gubernatorial can didacy f Charles E Hughe. Marcus Braun, chairman of the meeting, read the tneiMuig, which waa " follows: k Kitliv or who bat trisd to convey the Impression that I am not heart ami aoui " -ITugbce for governor of New York, la either wilfully or inadvertently labor ing under a deluaton. I am tint, laat .-i .1! ,.-tlm fur Htiffhe. leaue I believe and know and feel that he atanda precisely ft the name principle .1 . - J fn. T authorize von to a I lll . - make that aUtement to your friend and my -frlende on the cut aide with alt the emphaMe that it in ju. received with tu multuoua applauae and cheering. It I claimed by the H.-arst follower, that At . - . ..... Jamamlpil bv the vne mu"Kr " . , .i h ataU central commit cimimiau vi , tee in order to Ulster up Hughes, and which which hla election as governor of New York largely depends. WAS A DOUBLE MURDER, Mr. and Mra. Loui Hamilton of High land, New York, Found Dead. NEW YORK, Oot. 27. Murder and elf.dentruetlon ended la night tne lives of a man and woman who were reglKtcred at the Hotel GrifTou, a down town hostelry, aa Mr. and lira. emoiair. nf Tiurllnirton. Vt. From papere found In the room, however, It appeara that they are Mr. and Mrs. Louie namllton, nf iilMamI. N. Y. The bodlea were found in their chamber. The woman bad been shot through the brcaat, ana thA mnn died from bullet wound I" the head. The right hand of the man claaped a revolver of large cauure Nothing Indicated a atmggle. CASTRO ON DECK. NEW YORK. Oct. 27.-Informatlon made public here by 0. B. Iljruei. the Venoauelnn consul general to New xorK, ii to the effect that President Castro who ha been reported dangerously ... . . ll it 1-' Itta nntlAI. ill Is again aueuumg w . - REACHED TOP NOTCH. NEW YORK, Oct. 27.-Felix Iaman, of Philadelphia paid a fany V for - i. ni roiil estnte In Mau- hnttan yesterday. For the property at the aoutlieaat corner ui and 42nd atreet, 73.3 by 100, he paid . dm rate Of 8211 lp i .ocn'.m'i', vi nv v..- - square foot. . FRENCH STEAMER LOST. PORT MAHON. Oct. 27-The French steamer Isaac Pereire went on the rocks north of MIndorca today. There waa a heavy fog tl, the time. No lives were Jost. The steamer will be a com plete wreck. ' i Hasn't Sufficient Fundi to Pay Amer- lean HMeranity. TANGIER, Oct. 27.-The American mission headed by Minlnter Gummere, has decided to remain la Fei until the sultan takes steps ifor the payment of the Indemnities demanded for outrages upon Anwrlnn oltles. The government declares It has not sufficient fund to meet these dnmands. It I rumored here that Dr. Rosen, the German minister to Morocco, bu arranged to mull email loan to the 6ulUn. Dr. Rosen, will remain at Fea because of the disturbed state of the country. SERVED BIM RIGHT. TITI.A. Vt. orAt a meeting of the livl nobllltv here veterdv It wai decided to exclude Profeor Serge Mou romUeff. who wat president of the de funct lower House of Parliament, from participation In the activities or the nolillltr on the around that he la on of the elgncre of the Viborg manifesto. M, Mouromtnen was exemaea urn week irom the alttln of the Moscow Kematvo and municipality alio on ao. count of nil saving aignea me vioorg manlfeito. CAMPAIGN ENDED. Wind.up of the New York Gubernatorial Campaign Last nignt. NEW YORK, Oct. 27.-The week of campaigning In thla dty waa brought to a flnlnh tonight, when ten thouend people listened to election argument! and gave vent to much enthusiasm. FLIES TO CANADA Defunct Cashler'Aetna Bank Turns Up Missing. FOLLOWING AN INDICTMENT Mra S. F. Foster, Hla Private Secre tary, Has Alao Leift the City-Believed to be in Company with Cashier. BUTTE, Oct. 27. F. E- Garclde, cash- ler of the dofunct Aetna bank, la miss- lug, following the handing down of an Indictment by the grand jury in con nnn with the failure of that insti. tution. It, waa disclosed today that r ainnirrA nlinr. hail also left the city, and it It believed ahe la with Garclde. Mrs. Foster has been very active In the at f nurdilp. in Bavins off his ac counts for him. Garclde's and Mrs. Foster'a destination la believed to be Boaton, while othera claim they left for Canada. HIGHER WAGES DEMANDED. Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers Demand an Increase. CLEELAND, Oct 2.7 It was official ly announced at the headquarters of the Brothehood of Locomotive Engineers in this city today that requests had been made not only to the lines west of Chi cago, but also to a number of the big eastern railways, for higher wages and !.... ,..L!n nnrulltlnm for nil clltHSeS VUbbUi WV1"5 "v of trainmen. It .was said that similar reneBts would probably be made by that 1 . i. 1 .... il . :1 In organisation to every omui u.v ... the United States between the At lantfo and Poclflo coasts. STILL FIRING JAPS. Student at Annapolis College Retired, Claimed to Be voluntarily, wmnn Out. 27. The allocation that the retirement of Midshipman Asahi w!in frnm the naval academy at Annapolis, wa due to the request of . - A. TIT hUInnrAH the 'Japanese emDassy vvwi"kvw, here to be imipossible,- as the Japanese government has carefully ... -.!.!, nvtlilnr Hkelv to urovoke the United Statos. Kitagikl's parents are without word from him, but It is Be lieved his retirement was voluntary and . 11 . il -IA..K in no way connected wiia tue tion at San Francisco. KILLED BY AUTOMOBILE Robert M. Synder Million ire Killed at Stiouis. CHAUFFEUR ARRESTED Attempted to Save Life of Small Boy Who Jumped In front of Machine. THE BOY DIED OF INJURIES la the Father of Carey Snyder, Mur dered at HllUboro, Who Disap peared Ten Months Ago, Whose Wife Made Confession. viveis TTV A,t 97 Tnhftrt M. Snyder, a millionaire capitalist, and natiwio v-i w-. who was under indictment in ei. wui . .It.rnA n hrllMTV. died at the Agnew hospital here tonight from the ..it. nf Ininrlaa rowivcl in an &U- tomobile accident on the Independence road few momenta before. Snyder waa in his own automobile. j.t...n k rr.nV f Rrbroeber. an ex- pert driver, and waa riding eastward and i . t . amU was just - passing muvuig car when the chauffeur aw a small boy Jump In the path of the machine. t- .(rnrf in aavA th bov. Schroeber turned the machine toward the curb, and as it etruck. Snyder, wno was i i rnr Ant. waa thrown out and i 4rillv niila fracturlnir agaiiini' u II VH i . O his skull at the base of the brain. The boy, whose name was Artnur itoeaeii. ... Lnnolcoit ilawn and fatally hurt. Schroeber was not injured. Snyder waa taken to the Agnew hoa :ii .t,r ha AfH without rezain unuUiuMi. Sohroeher was talc. II1H vno . w . en to the police station, where he made . .i.tnvi.nt nr thA an air ana wu iaic released. Schroeber says he waa not driving over ten miles an Hour at tne time or the acciaen. n,Ull ha in!nrei bov. died late to IVVnuv, "'J ' DnKorf f SnvHir is the father of Carey Snyder who disappeared ten nnh. . ant whose bodv was found October 1 near Hilleboro, and who was l. v..v.-j nt Mr. Snvder wno maae a confession today. Robert M. Snyder ii survived by a widow anu vmee ANARCHIST DISAPPEARS. Fricnda Claim He Waa Secretly Arrest ed by Detectives. nt.rcvn.ANT. Oct. 27. Friends of Alexander Bcrkman, the anarchist, who mvstorioiiRlv disappeared here Thurs day, Insist that he has been abducted olther bv private detectives or secret ...!. -nutoU Wnltur Hehlen. at BVlVlc uuiui.'.. - ,hnse home Berkman stopped here, yes tnt.Tr palled on Harris R. Cooley, chair- nf he board of public service, and told the latter that he had received Information which led him to helieve that Berkman had been followed here bv deteotives and that they had pro cured his secret arrest and tnat ne w imw beinir held a prisoner somewhere without due process of law. Mr. Cooley ....(.J TioUnn r.prmlsninn tn make a gglUUbCU " aowh nf the workhouse and otner in atitutions here, but he was not found at any of these places. BASEBALL, At Oakland Portland, 10 Oakland, 3 Af TTrBsnn Seattle. 2: Fresno. 0. At Los Amreles San Francisco, 2j Los Angeles, 2. PRESIDENT'S BIRTHDAY. WASHINGTON, Oct. 27.-PresIdent BnnnAvelt ia 48 years old today. He conirratulatlons. A din ner in bin honor was the feature of the day. ' INSURGENTS FIGHTIHU. II III Y M V 1 1 r IT - Cuban Outlaws Will Be Taken Care of by Troopa. HAVANA. Oct. 27,Aa a reiult of continued dcpreiUtloni in the numeroui small bands of Iniurgente in Santa Clara Paovlnce, Brigadier General Franklin Bell has ordered the Fifteenth cavalry, which is stationed at Placetus, to occupy the towm of Santa Uara, Enm-ranra. Cienfuecoi. Crucee and San to Domingo, taking the places of the rural guard garrisons, wnicn wm wien be released to pursue and scatter we marauders. This pressing Into service of the rural guards is In accordance with Governor Magoon'a policy not to use American troopi in the suppression of disorders, , YOUNGEST SOLDIER. Controversy Settled in Favor of Man From Seattle. WASHINGTON. Oct. 27.-The con troversy as to who waa the youngest soldier of the Civil War baa probably been settled in favor of Perry Byan of Seattle. He enlisted as a drummer boy in Company D. 24th Iowa volunteers, on August 22. 1862, at the age of nine years and nine months. He was born October 22, 1852, In Kane county, HI- but enlisted from Mount Vernon, Iowa. Aftw serving nearly a year he waa honorably discharged on a, aurgeon's certificate of disability. The pension oncers have investigated Byan'a war papers and found that hla representa tions are correct. He will receive a uoy sura as back pension. SCHM1TZ IN LONDON Claims to be Making Investigation Municipal niiaiFS. INTERESTED IN SAN FRANCISCO ha ia Nnn-Committal in Reference to Recent Charges of Grafting and Believed He Will Not Return Home, NEW YORK, Oct. 27. A Herald ca ble from London today conveys an in terview with Eugene Schmita, mayor nf Kaii Francisco, who is at present in the British capital, spending moet of .... . ! bis time in visiting London's municipal districts in order to aee how affairs are aadministered and the class of building that ia in vncrue. Mr. Schmita expressed the opinion that in reconstructing San Francisco they must ouud for me peo nla whn will live there 200 years hence, as well as today and tnat was tne rea nn for his visit to Europe, lie m tAmled to visit most of the bin cities on the continent, he said, and his visits to Lixerpool and Glasgow already made, had been useful, ne spoke of the dock system at Liverpool as having ia vorablv imnressed him and declared that some of the ideas, if applied to San Francisco, would make tnat. pori one of the greatest of harbors. Mayor Schmitz said he hoped, as the result nf his tnnr. to make all the best points of municipal administration in Europe contribute to tne weu.oemg 01 hi neonle. so that in a few years San Francisco will have arisen a finer and "more beautiful city than ever. When ske1 about the recent ueney in Ran Francisco, he foiimed indifference, but is very anxious to keep in touch with developments. It V .. W4 is mooted, that in the event 01 ivuei, Schmita and the board of supervisors being indicted for alleged gratting, Schmitz will not return to nn f ran cisco, at leasst, not until the political storm blows over. SEVERE WIND STORM. ST. twtts. Oct. 27. Two persons were seriously injured by the blowing down of two buildings at Third and Carr streets, shortly atter is ociock wub morning. The storm came without ,rnln from tne southwest. In number of casea people went out into the streets, fearing a oyoione. A iinnccnnled two-storv frame resi dence on Bond Avemie, East St Louis, was also blown down during the storm. IlliUU. U1UULII CONFESSES Claims Perry and Rogers Murdered Her Husband. HUSBAND A CRIMINAL CrimeCommitted at Time of Pro posed Attempt to Rob For est Grove Bank. KILLED DURING THE QUARREL Charges of Illicit Connections with Geo Perry Aasigned as the Cuae for Making the Confession to Dis trict Attorney. HILLSBORO, Oct. 27. Mrs. Carey M- Snyder today made a complete confes sion of the murder of her husband to Deputy District Attorney T. B. Tongue and C. E. Runyon, court stenographer. She waa driven to desperation DT th belief that District Attorney Allen waa reaching the conclusion that ahe had sealed her lips because her relations with George Perry were illicit and that there was a growing suspicion that the might have been implicated in w rair w Wounded to the heart by the false light in which ahe had been placed before the public, and wnen snown doc umentary evidence implicating her with the murder, she maae a sweeping Annfes&ion this morninu. fiha atatAii that her apparent man . . - .... ference to the murderers being punbh. A waa due to her love for- her husband turning to hate on account of his crim inal propensities and tne innuumn treatment to which ahe had been sub jected. She admitted that her hua y.tiA waa to have taken part In the Forest Grove bank robbery with Perry and a man known to ner as iivgw and that a auarrel cased him to fail to be on the apot when the deed was committed. Bhe acusea ner ueaa Ami Perr nf Dlanninir first to vauu wm J . , hold up the box office at the Helig hf and nf robbimr Ut.n alar, a i.weir atnra in Portland, after mur derins the cleric, ana expiamca wujr i, bloody plot failed. The decision was reached to rob the Forest Grove bank. Perry's apparent indifference to tne it,,Q,tinn and his attitude of innocence, Mrs. Snvder asserta, is due to the be. ilf that ahe knew notmnff. one a&yo Snyder- promised Perry not toilet his wife know anything about tne pun roaqiisa rIio rafused to beoome an ac cessory to the conspiracy to murder and x V...in11vr rob, she says sue was oeateu uruwmj hv her husband, and that once two shots were nrea into iu wall over er head to intimidate her. DEFENSIVE ALLIANCE. Regrouping of the Great Powers of the World, , ) v"EW YORK. Oct. 27.-A London dis patch published here today, claims that a defensive alliance has been maae d tween Great Britain. France and Italy, which is to become operative, whenever the trinle alliance ' between Germany AnatriA-and Italy shall expire. This re-cpoupinir of the great powers, says the dispatcr, is a natural outcome of the destruction oi the balance of pow er in Europe consequent on the paralysis of Russia in the Japanese war. The compact, It is stated, ia an im oortant steo in the formation oi league of peace, the great object King Edward has labored to accomplisn since he aneceeded to the throne. Spain and iPortmral are said to cordially support it and the further statement is made that there is pood reason for believing; that it commands th sympathy of the United States. , i Will Resign Chairmanship of the Na tional Committee. WASHINGTON. Oct. 27. Postmaster General Cortelqou will retire from the chairmanship of toe Republican nation al committee when e become secre tary of the Treasury, in succession to Secretary Shaw.;; Tbia atatement . is made on good authority. It has been senerally understood that Secretary Shaw would retire from the treasury o& the 4th of March next, but an intima tion has been riven that he might sevet his connection with the department be. tween the first of January. Harrv 8. New', vke-ch&irman of the Reonblican national committee, will, It ia said, assume the duties of chairman when Mr. Cortelyon retires. AWARDED JUDGMENT. Court Street Theater Company Secure! Heavy Damagea. BUFFALO. Oct. 27. A verdict award ing Mfl.500 damages to the Court Street Theater company of Buffalo against the Empire Circuit Company, known as the Burlesque Trust, waa returned by iurv in the Supreme Court hurt night The Court Street Theater Company sued the Empire Circuit Company tor $100,000, alleging that It had conspired tn rnin the business of the plaintiff by inducing managers to break existing contracts for engagements mere unaer threat of enure exclusion irom the nu merous burlesque houses controlled by the Empire Circuit throughout the United States. A number of the man agers did cancel theif contracts and the theater closed on January 13, 1902, and waa never reopened., ' Arrives in Los Angeles at Resi dence of Grandfather, DIRECT HEIR TO THRONE Boy Who May in the Future Rule the Destinies of Poland and Assist m Throwing Off the Yoke of Op- pression. LOS ANGELES, Oct. 27.-The Herald this morning prints the following: A new head to the throne of Poland waa born in Los Angeles last night "A W who in future year may rule the destinies of that once powerful kingdom and assist its people in throw ing off the yoke placed on them by the countries which now govern it waa born to Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Gilhouaen, at their home at 287 Brighton Avenue at 6:30 o'clock last night. s Th child is a erandson of Colonel , John Sobieski, descendent of King John HI., and direct heir to the Fousn tnrone, ma mother. Mrs. Gilhousen, ia the only living child of Colonel Sobieski, her younger brother navmg uiea m 1895. "Mr Gilhousen is the teller at the First National Bank in this city and is a well known clubman. Ihe young emiule were married here five years ago, shortly after Mrs. Gilhousen ar rived in Los Angeles from ner ioraiw home in Salem, III. They are both prominent in society. "Colonel SobiesKl, tne grano was born in 'Warsaw, Poland, Septem. bet 10, 1842, and is the sixth In direct line, throuch the oldest son of the great warrior monarch. He . was banished from Poland and came to this country in 1855. CHEYENNES AND UTES. Battle Imminent Between Two Tribes of Indians. CHEYENNE, Oct. 27. According to advices received from the Wyoming state officials, the government will take no chances and will send an entire reg iment to surround the Utes. Two com panies of infantry have gone to inter, cept the Utes in case they attempt to reach, Cheyenne agency before the ar rival of the cavalry from Fort Meade. Old . timers here say that should the Utes reach the Cheyennes, they would fire that band into revolt and a serious war, would result, as the Cheyennes are hard fighters. " ON BORN TO THRONE