33rd YEAR. NO. 204 GERMANY'S- AniTUDE TOW FRANCE ANGERS FREHCNil Kaiser in Regard to Mo rocco Provokes Trouble HAY PRODUCE CRISIS Recognition of Usurper Mulal Comes Like a Bombshell to All France BRUTAL CHANGE OF FRONT X tht Way Germany'! Actiont U Considered by Frenchman, and the Preat Consider the Incident "Pro vocative" Powera Mar Step In. " PARIS, Sept. 2. -The action of Germany in breaking up the concert of the power with regard to Morocco by notifying the signatories to the Algeciras Act that she considered the actual situation demanded the imme diate recognition of Mulai Hafid, the usurping Sultan of Mocco, hai fallen like a bombshell in Park A felling approaching consternation is mani fested in official circles. The notifica tion, which was made verbally, is not accompanied by any explanation of Germany's "brutal change of front," as it i termed here, and in govern ment circles the action of Germany and the dispatch to Fci of Dr. Vasscl, the German consul at Tangier, can no longer be dissociated. France can see In Germany's action only her intention to disregard the Alaeciras Act and seek a soecial nosi- tion in Morocco for he'rself. The con- sequences both from an international and French standDoint are exoected to be deplorable. , In answer to Germany's call for rccotrnit on of Mula Hafid before h has entered into engagements with Europe, fanatical Arabs who had been gathering on the Algerian ' frontier attacked yesterday the French oost at Boni'dib. The Associated Press is in a posi tion to present the French official view of the situation: Germany's notification came as a complete surprise to France and Spaing who are, engaged in elaborat lug a program of the demands to be presented to Mulal Hand for the safe- plank .being adopted. guarding of the common interests of United States Senator Weldon B. Europe and American in Morocco. , Heyburn, of Shoshone. : These demands are to be submitted , Congressman Thomas R, Hamer, to the signatories of the Algeciras; of .Fremont.;. - " j Act as 'soonUs'Uhey Xrt presented, ' Governor James H"T Brady of Ban and Germany was so notified several nock, days ago. Germany took no exeep- Lieutenant-Governor L. H. Sweet tion to this course, and we presumed zcr; of Cassia, that she was entirely satisfied until Secretary of State Robert Lans euddenly there came this crash out of don, of Washington, a blue sky. , ' . . Auditor S. Taylor, of Bonner. There" was no longer any question Treasurer C. .A,.' Hastings Nez "MOTHER OF FOREST" IS ONLY DAMAGED Fire in Calaveras Forest Be Checked STOCKTON, Cal., Sept, 2. -The fire in the Calaveras forest near the big .Jtrces has gone northward away irom tna lamous grove jinu is now running southerly toward the Stanislaus-river, The fire fighters believe 4 l-ii f win ,iPf.lr if Kfm'A nmrniniT 'The? only big tree attacked was ARDS of upholding Abd EI Aziz, Both France and Spain recognized that he had disappeared definitely from the horizon. What we proposed to do was to force Mulai Hafid to ratify the engagements of his brother, Abd El Ariz, towards recognizing him. Now Germany cornea forward with a proposition to recognize Mulai Hafid before he has given any guarantee. It amounts to undoing the work of the Algeciras conference and" reverting to the status quo ante. The powers must decide between the position of Ger many'and that of France; the position of France we consider to be most loyal to the spirit and letter of the Algeciras Act The French press is unanimous in considering Germany's action provo cative, and possibly productive of an actual crisis. ' DEFEAT STATE TICKET AT ELEVENTH HOUR REPUBLICANS UPSET ALL CAL CULATIONS AT THE IDAHO STATE CONVENTION. T. HAMER FOR CONGRESSMAN Congressman Frtfnch Who Did Not Have a Candidate at Midnight, is Defeated in Short Order When Hamer is Nominated. NOISE, Sept. 2.-Thc republican ,a,c convention gave Idaho its big cst I'"ure prize when at the 1 1th hour it defeated the state ticket agtigatcd on by him, Brady the. nomi nce for governor. The opposition led by George W. Thompson of Nez Perce county put through a deal that ! N calculations and defeated the one man who was regarded as having clear sailing. Congressman French did not have a candidate against him until midnight last night. Before daylight the nomination had been made to defeat him, and it did so today. After Hamer had been nominated the opposition to the in surgent slate practically quit. There was a warm fight, strongly backed by Senator Heyburn, against the direct primary plank and it was defeated, 169 to 134. The local option Changes Course and Hay in Short Time "Mother of. The Forest," standing at the north end of the grove and that monster according to information at hand, was not much 'damaged. The tree has been dead for many years, but has long branches which caught fire.' An area of four miles has been, burned over. : : y ASTORIA, OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1003 POISOfi NOT THE CAUSE fj dioh death: Woman Who Was Found Dead, Not Poisoned, Says Chemist OAKLAND, Cal., Sept. 2.-No trace of poison was discovered in the digestive organs of Mrs. Daniel Don ahue of Emeryville, whose dead body was four.d buried in a swamp under a furniture factory last Sunday. The chemist says the absence of poison does not preclude the possibility that the woman met death at the hands of a poisoner, but is firmly convinced that at no time was there poison in her system. I'crcc. Mine Inspector F. C. Moore, Sho shone. Superintendent of Public Instruc tion S. Belle Chamberlain, Presidential Electors Edgar Wil son of Ada, John Lamb of Awyhee, A. A. Crane of Kootenai, DEATH BY LIVE WIRE. WALLACE, Idaho, Sept. 2,-Thos. Woodward, chief electrician of the Nbrthwest Light & Power Company was electrocuted today. He ascended a power pole to inspect a wire, lost his baalnce and fell across a wire carrying 2300 volts. Death was in stantaneous. He was a prominent mason, and was married only three weeks, FORAKER SURPRISES JUDGE HFT AT 6. A. I CELEBRATIONS Tremendous Cheer Greets Leader As He Joins the Candidate During Parade NO ILL FEELING BETWEEN THE TWO MEN Foraker Takes Occasion During He and Taft Have Ever Best of TOLEDO, O., Sept. 2. That Taft and Foraker are politically together is not only the public admission of both gentlemen, but also the political sen-) veterans received his attention. Af sation of Ohio. Foraker is the advo-( ter expressing his patriotic sentiment cated candidate for United Spates toward them he brought Senator senator to succeed himself and his i Foraker into the discussion. "Your services in the national campaign have been sought by Hitchcock and For- aker has promised to take the stump, Judge Taft did not have the least in-j timation when he left Middle Bass Island this morning, that he was to meet Foraker, but the city of Topeka seemed to know all about it and when few minutes after Taft had taken his position on the stand to review the G. A, R. parade, a carriage which headed the procession stopped in front of the stand and discharged its passengers amid a tremendous shout as the thousands in sight of the re viewing stand caught sight of the senior senator and coIIeaEiie. Sena tor Dick, Governor Harris and Mayor Whitlock also alighting from the car riage. Foraker was ' the last of the little, party' to reach Taft's side. They greeted each other cordially amid a mighty shout of the crowd and then the roar of cheers. The two sat to gether, and conversed earnestly for more than an hour, incidentally to gether receiving the plaudits of the marching veterans. ' Foraker left to keep a business engagement, Taft re- " s , t in the afternoon Taft and Foraker again met at the Lycem theatre where there was to be some speech-making, The crowd expressed their approval T COI'FIHE I.lllL0VNIit Judge Wolverton Gives Decision Dropping the Penalty PORTLAND, Sept 2,-Contending that the United States district attor ney was not warranted by law in at tempting to collect f 1000 from the estate of the late United States Sena tor John H. Mitchell, United States Judge Charles E. Wolverton this morning handed down a decision which vacates the fine imposed on the Senator, July 25, 1905. This action on the part of the court disposes of all matters in which Senator Mitchell was personally concerned and will jiermit the settling of the estate, which has been prevented pending the decision of the federal judge. ' The late Senator Mitchell was sen tenced to a term, ofr imprisonment and ,the payment of a fine of $1000 as a re sult of his indictment and conviction in the Oregon land fraud cases. The special count cm which he was found guilty was in accepting fees from S. A. D. Puter, leader of the land fraud ring in Oregon, for practicing before the departments. It was proved that Puter gave Mitchell two $1000 bills to expedite the patents on certain lands which were being acquired fraudulently. After the sentence, an appeal was taken to the supreme court by the aged Senator, but before the appeal was decided, Senator Mitchell died. His attorneys then procured an order Speech to Deny the Report That Been Anything But the Friends of the presence of the two and a great burst of cheers rang out. Taft's speech was a witty one and of course the chairman has said that I have filled the office for 20 years almost without a reward. As he did so, Senator Foraker whispered to me that there are some who would accent the honor on the same terms. "It is a pleasure for me to be here with Senator Foraker, because when the Governor of Ohio he gave me my, really first chance, and took a good deal of risk putting a man of 29 on the bench of the superior court of Cincinnati. We are about to enter, or rather we have entered a great oratorical campaign. It is a pleasure j to think we are going to stand in the campaign shoulder to shoulder, with the full strength of the republican party." Taft . then went into political argu ment sayihg the real issue is whether the voters of the country will give their endorsement to the Roosevelt policies and deeds of the republican party or turn to the democratic party vith its untried promises. " '.. ' Foraker was introduced a little later with cordiality. He began re- , L .l' ' marks by scoring the press to the ex tent of saying that there came near being a tragedy in his absence, from i the meeting, during the first 10 min- (Continued on page 8) CA10 CHllt! HITCHCOCK TO VISIT TAFI A! HOLE BASS from the court by which the sentence of imprisonment was vacated. The United States district attorney, how ever, sought to collect the fine from the estate. BASEBALL GAMES. National League. Brooklyn 2, Philadelphia 3. Cincinnati 2, Pittsburg 8. Chicago 8, St. Louis 0. American League. Philadelphia 5. New York. 2. Washington 3, Boston 2. Detroit 5, Cleveland 3. Chicago 4, St. Louis 1. Pacific Coast League. Portland 1, Los Angeles 8. Oakland 1, San Francisco 0. Northwest League. Seattle 0, Spokane 3. Tacoma 3, Butte 0. B SLIGHTLY LOWERED VERMONT RESULTS ESTIMAT ED TO SHOW A SIX PER CENT DECREASE. SURPRISING THE LEADERS The Decrease Was Unlooked For Owing to the Many Local Contests and the Heavy Voting at the Poiu. . . WHITE RIVER JUNCTION, yt, Sept. 2. Complete returns from yes terday's elections in Vermont show the following: ' George H. Prouty, Republican, for Governor, 45,281 ; James E. Burke, Democrat, 15953; Quimby S. Backus, Independence League, 1252; Eugene M. Campbell Prohibitionist, 826; J. H. Dunbar, Socialist, 479. ; .The total vote of . all parties 66,747, and Prouty's plurality Burke was 29,376. Although comparisons of this year's vote with the vote of four years ago cannot.be made until the complete vote is received, it is estimated the falling off of the republican vote was somewhat in excess of the reduction of the Democratic vote. The decrease in the Republican vote amounted to 6 per cent, and in the Democratic vote to 3 per cent. The decrease was surprising, in view of the numerous local contests, at which the voting was quite heavy. Political leaders were inclined to look upon the retupns today as indicating that the voters were somewhat apathetic in regard to the national issues, but not to a marked degree. The incoming Legislature will have at least one Democratic Senator, about 30 Democratic Representatives, REP LICAII PLURALITY MYSTERY SURROUNDS SURGEON'S DEATH Dr. Frederick T. Ruslin, a r While Entering His OMAHA, Neb., Sept. 2.-Dr. Fred erick T. Ruslin, one of the most fa mous surgeons in the West, was shot and killed as he was on the point of entering him home this morning at 3 o'clock. There is not a single clue to the murder. 1 ' - " : Dr. Ruslin had remained out late PRICE FIVE CENTS Conference Expected to Remove Friction SPEAKERS FOR OHIO Committee Promises to Supply Whatever Speakers Are Nec essary in That State TO GET VIGOROUS CAMPAIGN Leaders Decide That Indiana and Ohio Must Both be Worked to the Limit ajid Will Receive Special Attention. CHICAGO. Sept. 2.- ' Hitchcock, both the republican national man today decided to Indiana and Ohio on his return trip to Xew York. He will leave for In dianapolis tomorrow night and confer with Vice-President Fairbanks Fri day. He will leave the same evening for Toledo, Ohio, and will visit Taft at Middle Bass Island Saturday. The Indiana situation is giving officials of the nation committee some concern that the state must receive special at tention. ; Fairbanks intends to make a large number of speeches under the auspi ces of the Republican national com mittee. When Hitchcock meets Taft Saturday it is understood that all cause of friction over the manage ment of the campaign in Ohio will be given its fufl quota of funds to de fray the election campaign expenses. and at least six members of the In dependence 'League in ihe lower V'.:' house. Four years ago the House was stood 205 Republicans and 34 Demo over crats, so that the Republican majority of the coming year will be practically unchanged, and will insure the elec tion of a Republican successor to the late Senator Redfield Proctor, prob ably in the person of his son, Gover nor F. D. Proctor. The election of a Democratic mem ber of the State Senate gives the party a representation in that branch of the Legislature for the first time in several years. ALARMING CONDITIONS. . MEXICO CITY, Sept. 2-Accord-ing to a report received in this city alarming conditions prevail through out the republic of Honduras which explains the dispatch of the gunboat Bravo to the port of Puerto Cortes by the Mexicon government at the suggestion of the United States. Famous Doctor, Is Shot Home at Omaha for the election returns. His wife was awakened by a pistol shot and rushed downstairs and out on the porch. Dr, Ruslin was sitting in a chair.' "I have been shot," he said, and then lapsed into unconsciousness. He died half an hour later without regaining consciousness. A single pistol ball had entered the abdomen.