SECOND SECTION TWENTY PAGES 30VCR8THC MORNING FIILO ON THC LOWER COLUMBIA PUBLISH!! FULL At VOCIATCD PRESS REPORT 33rd YEAR. NO, 135 ASTORIA, OREGON, SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 1908 PRICE FIVE CENTS NEW YORK HIORS Unexpected May Happen In Re publican Nominating Convention MOST TALKED ABOUT WOMAN Bible Text For Street Car Passengers Volcano Expert Foretells Big Eruption, and Many Other Interest ing Facta Around the Metropolis. I NEW YORK. June, .-On the eve of the Republican national con vention. there ie a strong undercurrent of feeling here that an unexpected and possibly sensational development will occur next week at Chicago. All sort of ttorict are afloat the truth of which it is impossible to determine. One rumor that will not down is t"hat the thick-ami thin advocates of Roosevelt's renomination have laid careful plans which they are prepared to spring at the psychological moment to force the President to head the party ticket once more. According to this report, which is given with great detail, the President knows of this scheme and has commissioned Senat or Lodge and one or two other close friends to act for him when the. emer gency arises, but what their instruc tions are nobody seems able to tell. Another story is that in spite of his Refusal to consider the Vice-presi dential nomination Governor Hughe is t? be forced by the influence of New York State politicians to accept second place on the ticket withTaft as the only means of preventing his rcnnmiiutinn for Governor which the machine leaders here arc anxious to forestall at any cost. There ' are wl.ispcrs too that the unusual activ ity that has suddenly broken out among candidates for the Vive Presi denttai nomination, a dozen or more of them have come into the field within the past few .weeks is due to the unsatisfactory physical condition of Secretary Taft and the possibility that the sirain of life in the White House will make" another succession necessary before four years arc up The friends of the War Secretary ridicule this idea and point to the ease with which he has carried heavy load of work for the past eight years in proof of their assertions vWhilc it is difficult to substantiate any of the , many stories that have been in circulation here since Con gress adjourned the fact remains that among the delegates and politicians generally there is a feeling that some sudden explosion or startling turn of affairs is likely to change the appar ently cut and dried plans of the con vention, and consequently it seems likely that the attendance in Chicago will be the largest of any political gathering in the history of the coun try, The most talked about woman in America is Hetty Green who recent ; ly startled New York by moving from her Hobokcn flat to one of the city's most fashionable hotels. Giving din ners off .Bold date, consulting' a beauty specialist, and otherwise in dicating an Intention of casting her line in the fashionable fish-pond. This , statement as to the amount of com ment devoted to the lady sometimes referre'd to as "the female Russell Sage" is no mere" guess based on the hubbub her recent actions' have created. It is an estimate backed by cold figures and comes from the man who is engaged in supplying press clippings to a large number of well known persons and who recently en rolled Mrs. Green among his cHents. Acci Alic tip cording to this authority i Miss e Roosevelt was the most written woman in the country for some time before she became Mrs Lontr- worth. As a steady recipient of notice in the public prints, however, he says Miss Helen Gould has held first place 'for a long time. Mrs. Russel Sage is another woman who since her hits band s death, has been a profitable patron for the clipping bureau. Now, however, Mrs. Green, whose given name of Mehitabcl is popularly short ened to Hetty, seems to have a safe lead over all rivals. It is said that the clippings about her which the press bureau, lias been employed to furnish amount to twenty thousand, a month which means that she' must pay the tidy sum of twelve thousand dollars a year to learn what is printed con cerning her. Bible texts' as a substitute for the official "spotter" and a reminder to passenger inclined to ignor the for mality of handing over their tickets to the street car conductor is the novel idea that is being tried by Fredrick W. Whitrdge, receiver of the Third Avenue car line in this city, one of the sections of the big'Ryan Bclmont transportation system that went on the rocks of financial insol vency last winter Mr. Whitridge has bad posted prominently in all the cars over which his authority ex tends big signs reading in flaring letters "Thou Shalt Not Steal," with explanations that this applies to con ductors who knock down fares and passenger who fail to pay. Inas much as it is estimated that a high as ten per cent of the passengers car ried sometimes fail to yield revenue to the company for one or the other of these reason, Mr. Whitridge' in terest in spreading the influence of at least one, of the Ten Commandments it likely to prove a good investment if those who read the message take it to heart. The joke of the signs, as New York sees it, is that this Third Avenue line has been repeatedly pillaged by the financial wreckers and consolidates who have had charge of its affairs at different times and the hope is frequently expressed that some of these financiers may occasionally ride in the cars and study the precept displayed there. , Among the throngs leaving for Europe on the crowded ocean liners this week was one man who is going i ? on a remarkable and unusual journey. He is Mr. F A, Prrret, an American scientist who lives in Springfield, Mass., and whose name is much more familiar to students of physicial science than it is to readers of news papers. Mr. Perrct may be described as a volcano and earthquake expert for he has devoted himself to the study of these great disturbances id the earth's interior and undoubtedly knows more about the character and habits of both than any other man in the country. Mr. Ferret has discov ered that it is possible to forecast the occurrence of both earthquakes and volcanic eruptions by certain astron omical computations and he is An his way to witness the eruption of Mount Etna which he foretold last year, This volcano resumed its activiey a few weeks ago and the scientist says that its action will become more vio lent during July and August. In order to add to .his information on the subject he is going to spend these two months in the observatory on the mountain close to the crater where hewill miss nothing that goes on, with only two or three guards and at tendants and possibly one fellow scientist for company. Mr. Perret be lieves that with the careful study of volcanic phenomena it will be pos sible In time to prevent great dis asters and loss of life from this cause. A, relic of the days of the Tweed ring scandals of forty years ago came to light the other day in goiugg over the city's accounts. It was In an item of nearly three-quarters of a million dollars charged on the debit side of the city .ledger on account of the erection of the. New York county court-house, the city's unsightly monument to graft, It seems in build ing the" court house the plunderers were not satisfied with the pickings available from the appropriation but overdrew it more than seven hundred thousand dollars. The city eomptrol- ers refused to make good the amount but the' banks in which the amount was deposited dedncted it' from other funds of the city in its keeping and the entry was made in order to bal ance the city's books. l! NAMES COMMISSION To the International Road Xon jressat Paris. .", TO BE HELD OCTOBER 11 United State Will be Strongly and Officially Represented Says Presi dent Roosevelt, Logan, Waller, Pag Director With Excellent Staff WASHINGTON, June I3.-Pres. Roosevelt has directed that this Na tion be strongly and officially repre sented at the International Road Congress to be held at Paris the week beginning October 11, and credent ials have been issued naming Logan r.n- n . . . vvaiier rage, uirccior 01 me umce of Public Roads of the U, S. Depart-, mcnt of Agriculture, Chairman of the and or ov" a century and a quarter Commission. The other members tl)e so-called macadam road did every named are Colonel Charles, S. Brom-j thing that the famous French and well of the United States Corps oftSc0,c highway engineers claimed it Engineers, now serving a Superin-1 capable of. It came to be the ideal tendent of Buildings and Grounds of.'0 for suburbantections, and thou the District of Columbia, and Clif- sands of mi,cs wre bui,t France t0 ford Richardson of New York, an date. has spent $6,000,000 on her eminent chemist and one of the incomparable system of rock surfaced world's acknowledged authorities on bituminous road building materials. This coming Congress, which will Be attended by distinguished dele gate from every country in the For Men and 'Young 1 I fffX Are reliable, durable, hand tailored garments, perfect in style, faultless in fit, finished so beautiful that they are known as the clothing which is From the standpoint of values, equally excellent'garments have never been foffer'ed at so low a price. COME IN AND SEE THEM. The Workingm CHAS. LARSON, Prop. world, is regarded by highway en gineers and experts as probably the most important ever summoned for the discussion of an economic quest ion. Its need is the direct outgrowth of the advent of thf automobile, 'for while thousands are Ignorant of the fact, the soft tires of the modern motor-car are the greatest menace the hard surface thoroughfore of the world have ever been called upon to face. -To understand how a pneumatic tirp made of rubber could possibly injure a road surfaced with particles of crushed rock, one must have at least a faint understanding of the theories on which first Tresauget of Limogts and then MacAdam of Ayr built : that class of highway. They figured that a road composed of crushed stone would not only endure the constant traffic of iron-tired ve the metal-bound wheels would be constantly crushing the s,tones and forming rock dust. That dust would, they argued, not merely sift itsclP into all cracks and interstics, but would fill all surface inequalities and when wet would be rolled into a smooth, impervious, water-shedding, shell-like . sunacc They reasoned well, ,built wisely, National routes and the United States has followed to a degree, pos sessing at the present time approxi- (Continued on page 15) Style alone, or durability alone, do not make real valueit's only when the two are combined that the extreme of value is reached. This clothing that the man who buys moderate priced gar ments, wants them right in style and fit, as well as good in .material. THE SUITS which We are selling at $10.00 to $25.00 Bettor than THE LAST PRACTICE Before the American Olympic Athletics Make Trip CHAMPIONS MEET CHAMPIONS Every Event Will Be Handicap Af fair With The Champions Starting From Scratch Will Be At Least A Dozen Western Athletes. - NEW YORK, June U-For the last time before their trip to London where they will battle with the world, the American Olympic athletes will be seen in action this afternoon. With few exceptions the men who competed in the try-outs at Philadel phia last Saturday, will compete in the events at the Eighty Annual Games of the New York Athletic Club which will be held at the Club's summer home at Traver's island. Besides the easterns there will be at least a dozen western athletics of whom athletic supporters east of the Mississippi know only through pub lication f their feats. In nearly every event champions will meet champions, but while the wide fame will battle for more hon ors, the lesser lights will have ample opportunity to win applause and trophies. Every event will be a handi- B tM':-' the. famous CU4KANTEED CLOTfilMI is made by people who know $ Gisfoin Mq&q1" en s St cap affairs with the champions start- g ii vim sviaiui. ; On the field events the one which will probably furnish most interest will be the contest between A, K. Dearborn of New York Athletic Club who recently established a world's record at the Philadelphia try-outs, hurling the discuss, and Martin Sheridan, the Irish American champion whom the former defeated I !Ltenj!!t!"l1f, and allow their opponents big handi caps. In the pole vaults, Gilbert, Dray, Nelson and Cook are among those entered. Shaw, the Darthmouth col lege champion hurdler, will again try for a record in the 120 yeard high hurdle event In the quarter mile, Harry Hillman of the New York A. C. will meet J. B. Taylor, the University of Pen nsylvania speed marvel on terms. James Rector of the University of Virginia and Law son Robertson, the Irish American Athletic Club giant, who finished inches apart in , the Olympic .try-outs will meet in the 100 yard dash. from the honor marks in their respec tive marks are: Melvin Shepard, Fred Beilars, Ray E wry, Harry Porter, Cook of Cor nell in the broad jump. Matt McGrath John Flanagan, Halstead and Sulli van. HEAVY RAINS FALLING KANSAS CITY, June 13, 3:30 a. m Rain is falling in torrents over the whole Kaw watershed, making high water in the Kaw and lower Missouri a certainty. V B If Mein ore I I 518 BOND STREET