Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1908)
e ta in v l 1 if! s : K r. I MM M M 1 l I 5 1 ! 0 sovtns thi MonNinta ricLO on ths lower colum bia putDSHKS run Avtocurro pm report S2rd YEAfl. KO. 242 ASTORIA, OSECC.'i, CATUEDAY, CCTCZER 17, ISv fecs Fr; cexts fc vC.Y ' - ill Gil SOI CROQKED DEALINGS Cashier Scriber Arrcste For Embezzlement FORGED NOTES FIGURE The Erring Cashier is Said to to Have Made Two Confessions TO BE TAKEN TO PORTLAND Scriber li Said to Have Admitted Ir ; rtjularltiei Amounting to $24,500 Examiner Cotch Hat Little to Say of the Affair, . LA GRANDE, Or., Oct. 16. J. W. Scriber, cashier of the Farmer' & Trader' National . Dank o( thi city was thi morning placed under arrest, charged with embezzlement of $12, 225.2S of the fund of the bank. It Is alo thought nsiing sccuritki and papers will largely increase the amount of the defalcation. The arrest was made by United State Marshal Reed in person.'' Mr. Scriber wa taken in custody at his home, and will be brought to Tort land thi evening. A complaint wa filed in thi case by United State Attorney John Mc Court, after he had received a pre liminary report of the condition of the bank from Claud Gatch,' National Hank Examiner, who has been on the ground for some time, and after he had held a telephone conversation with Deputy United State Attorney Evans, whom he sent to La Grand on Wednesday last. , "It's the tame old story, an ingen ious cashier, a board of directors that neither knew its duty nor did it, and over-confident bank examiners." These few words are all that can be wormed from the lips of National Bank Examiner Claude Gatch of Sa lem, who has been in charge of the suspended Farmer' & Traders' Na tional Bank since last Tuesday morn ing. V ' :! ';-' '"'' ;"" Scriber is a widower. He has three sons, ranging from 12 to 23 years of age. One i in Salem and the other two In La Grande. ROOSEVELT WRITES LETTER ON LABOR Says if Taft is Hot Elected Labor Will Suffer, Host of AH a Letter is Answer to T: f. Dolan CHICAGO, Oct. 16.-T. J. Dolan, general secretary and treasurer of the International Brotherhood of Steam Shovel and Drcdgenien, today made public a letter ; from Roosevelt, an swering one sent by Dolan in which Dolan declared that his organization was proud of Taft's honorary mem bership in the brotherhood. Roose velt's letter points to Taft's record on behalf of organized labor at the Isthmus and says for himself that he never opposed labor when he thought it right, nor hesitated a moment to oppose organized labor when he thought it wrong. Roosevelt -concludes; "I do not believe the laboring men of this country have ever had in office a stauncher friend than Taft. He. resented the attack upon him by ( FAILURE SIIOl'l PREMATURE PUBLICATION. PARIS, Oct. 16. Oflicial circles re gard the publication of the proponed program in advance of its communi cation and acceptance by Turkey and other lignatoriet of the Berlin treaty a particularly unfortunate and likely to embaras subsequent negotiation. FAIRBANKS TALKS. NEW YORK, Oct. 16 In a round of republican rallies held in widely separated sections of the city Vice President Fairbanks addressed en thuiatic : audience ; aggregating many thousands of persons. The ad dresses covered every phase of the political issue of today. A CRISIS III SUGAR riEARLY REACHED PRODUCING AND REFINING IN TERESTS ARE AT, WAR ' IN BRAZIL. SUGAR TRUSTS EXIST THERE Modern Machinery Adding Sfuch to Profit Shipment of Brazilian Sugar to American . Will be Much Increased in Future. ' WASHINGTON', Oct. 16. -The sugar industry hat reached the most critical period of its history and is now the center of a great conflict in the Brazilian business world, in which producing and refining inter ests are at war, writes Consul Gen eral Anderson at Rio to the state department here. Even if the present high duty is maintained, he says, the market will dwindle until it will not suffice to support the present volume of the industry. Without artificial sup port many sugar concessions will have to stop business. The present co'ntest is between the .planter-factory as the producing interests, and the refiners. There is a very high import duty and largely decreased consump tion and a coming bumper crop. Be side, a sugar trust exists in Brazil, not for importation and domestic sale of sugar, but for the control of the domestic market by controlling the country's sugar exports, to Brazil certain self-constituted political lead ers of organized labor; for these men are trying to persuade .the people of the country that organized labor has interests apart .from any that are hos tile to the interests of the great mass of the American people, and such at titude, if persisted in inevitably in the end will result disastrously to organ- iized labor itself. I believe, they wll 1 fail, in this effort to misguide their followers and to do wrong to the 'American people; and it is above all things for the interest of organized labor that they should fail. If Taft is not elected the chief sufferers from the .chaotic business conditions that j would follow would be the working 'men; all our citizens would benefit by 'Taft's election but workingmen most of all." EJECTS PilOFOSa FO sot nm Government is Willing Only to , Purchase Oriental Hallway SOFIA, Oct. 16. Members of the Bulgarian cabinet-who yesterday ac companied Czar Ferdinand to his hunting lodge in the Riolo Mountain returned today and announced that the cabinet had decided to reject the proposal emanating from London for the payment of indemnity to Turkey as a condition of recognizing Bul garia's independence. A note to that effect will be sent the powers. The only question the government is will ing to negotiate is to purchase the rights of the Oriental Railroad Com pany. .! and directly affects American mar kets because certain amounts of Bra zilian sugar are likely, to be forced upon the American markets at any price. ., . The planter and factory people who have bought modern machinery, mostly from the United States, sre making profit without support of any aid. The shipments of Brazilian sugar to the United State will be much increased in the near future, it is predicted. A SECRET ORGANIZER. FLAUQUMINE, La., Oct 16. S. Cooper, a prominent planter of Mar ingouin, this parish, has received a letter from "Determination" whom detectives are now tracing as an or ganizer of night riders. The. letter differs from others written by the same individual to other persons in this state in that it commands Cooper to organize a band of night riders among his neighbors and calls upon him to "immediately call together a few of your trusted neighbors and have this notice posted on all gins." fll'S FATE IS l THE US OF JDH OF HIS PEERS The Case Submitted at 2:30 Yesterday Afternoon and No Decision Arrived at Yet THE JURY WAS LOCKED UP FOR THE NIGHT Deputy City Attorney Fitzgerald Hakes a Strong Argument Ajainst the Accused Man and Attorney Jeffcry Pleads Eloquently for the Prisoner PORTLAND, pet. 16.-The Mar tin case w.ent to the jury at 2:15 o'clock this afternoon, following,, the instructions given by Judge Cleland. According to these instructions, three verdicts, if the defendant be found guilty, are permissible, murder in thi first degree, murder in the second degree and manslaughter, according as the jury may decide from the evi dence. " " ' "," '.' , i Counsel for the defense .made ob jections" to certain features of the j courrt's instructions which were al- lowed', but the exceptions to the in structions as a whole were not al lowed. The jury took with it all the material evidence submitted during the trial. For a half hour yesterday afternoon j and for a little more than two and a half hours this morning, Martin was forced to listen to a drastic arraign ment by Deputy City Attorney Filz- gerald, whose address ended at I'.oon. '. mm eciiKi innrinn 'it ftftnrvr Presented to Emperor and Em press cf Japan Yesterday TOKIO, Oct, 16. The official visit of the American commission to the Japanese exposition ended today when the members of the commis sion, Secretary John C. O'Laughlin and Chief Clerk W. A. Ncwcombc and the ladies of the party were pre sented to the emperor and empress of Japan by Ambassador Thomai J. O'Brien and Mrs. O'Brien. Tomor row the commissioners will be guests at a dinner given by Baron Mumm de Schwartzcnstein, the German am bassador. The party will remain in Tokio until the arrival of the Amer ican fleet and then will, visit points of interest in the interior. ., -f- , , AERIALIST BUSY. NEW YORK, Oct. 16.-A. M Herring, who made the delivery of his aeroplane to the aeronautical board of the signal corps at Fort Mycr last Tuesday, is busy at work on some minor parts of his machine in his Broadway shop. When asked where he would make his prelimin ary flights, he said he had given no thought to the selection of suitable grounds for trial flights. "I do not expect to fly for at least two weeks," said Mr. Herring. "Then if everything goes right, my prelim inary flights may not require more than two days and under those cir cumstance I may complete my of ficial tests at Fort Mycr in one day. The merit, of my machine will be shown very quickly when it is ready to be tried out." . , .. BURNED TO DEATH. HURST, Mich., Oct 16. Henry Kemps, wife and two children were burned to a crisp in a fire which de stroyed their home last night. An other child is missing and is believed I to have met a similar fate. Generally Martin stood the ordeal well, though there were times when his face showed the effort he was making to avoid showing emotion, and once or twice he glared fiercely at the prosecutor when the latter turned and pointing a .forefinger at the defendant denounced him as the assassin. For almost three hours yesterday afternoon Attorney Jeffrey pleaded eloquently in the effort to save his client from conviction. In the intro duction he reminded the jurors that they were sitting in judgment on a human life, and should be swayed by no outside cosideration' or issue er roneously dragged into the case. Attorney Jeffrey was congratulated by his colleagues on his effective plea, and has since been complimented by the state's attorneys. The jury tonight were unable to agree upon a verdict after eight hours' deliberation, and was locked up for the night. i FIFTFFf Ml ll-LII llll II011E DEATHS POWDER EXPLOSION. NANAIMO, B. C, Oct. 16-An ex plosion in the powder house of the Cumberland Mine today injured four men. two severely. .The boarding house 20 yard from the powder house wa blown to matchwood, the inmates fortunately escaping injury. WIPED OUT. MARINETTE, Wis.; Oct. !6-For- est fires wiped out the twns of Pack ard and Pound last. night. RETURNED TO WORK. LYNN, Oct. 16. More than one- half of the 1500 operatives employed in 67 shoe factories in th:s city re turned to work today. THE AUK! FLEET A BAD SMI SEAS WASH OVER THE VES SELS AND SEVERAL LIFE BOATS SMASHED. MEN ARE WASHED GYEHSCAnD One Man Drowned And Two Are Rescued Gunner's Mate on the Battleship Missouri Dies of Heart Disease. TOKIO, Oct. 17 (9 A. .M.) The delay in the American battleship fleet arriving at Yokohoma is due to a tre menduous storm off the north coast of the Island of Luzon of the Philip pine group. The storm began on the morning of October , 12th and con tinued until the afternoon of the 13th. One man was drowned and some damage resulted to the fleet. These details were communicated to the As sociated Press at Tokio by Wireless Telegraph from the Connecticut through the special courtesy of the Japanese government The fleet will arrive at Yokohama at 9 o'clock on the morning of October 18th. Additional advices by wireless from the Atlantic fleet show that the ves sels had an extremely rough time, the seas constantly washing the decks; life boats were smashed on. several of the vessels. William Fuller, gunner's (Continued on page 8) BRYAN SPEEKS AT CONVENTION HAL3 Discusses Questions of the Campaign on the Streets and in Auditorum-Great Crowds Out DENVER, Oct. 16.-Bry'an was the guest of this city several hours to night meeting with a cordial recep tion. In spite of the threatening storm and fitful rainfalls great crowds lined the streets through which the candi date rode in an automobile to the au ditorium where he delivered the prin cipal speech of the evening. En route Bryan halted thrice to address crowds at designated points. Fourteen thou sand people assembled in the auditor ium to listen to the Nebraskan's dis cussion of questions of the campaign. He demanded that the republican na tional committee follow the example of the democratic national committee in publishing particulars regarding campaign contributions. He discuss ed the Philippines, the popular elec- UiMIIES HI Relief Train is Wrecked ;d Cars Burn FIRE SWEEPS TOWNS The Town cf f'etz, Michigan is Wiped Out and Inhabi tants Fie 3 CAUSED BY FCHEST FIHE3 Relief Train Carrying Refugees is Ditched While Running Through Flames and Fleeing People Are Cremated Women and Children. ALPENA, Mich., Oct. 16.-Fifti.en people lost their lives last night in the burning . of the . Detroit and Mackinaw relief train which was car rying inhabitants of the village of Metz, 23 miles north of here, to safe ty from forest fires which are sweep ing away their homes. The ill fated train was ditched by spreading rails at Newyki Siding, a few miles south of Metz and the terrified refugees were forced to abandon the cars and rush for safety either down the track with burning forests on either side or (into ploughed fields near the siding. Eleven of the victims are women and children who were unable to escape quickly enough for a gondola car which they were occupying. Charred bodies were found there today when rescuers reached the scene. Two of the men victims- were members of the train crew. Four additional fatalities occurred in the neighborhood of the wreck last night. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wagner died of heat exhaustion at their farm near the scene of the wreck and Mr. and Mrs. Nowicki, Jr., lost their lives by the burning of their house near the siding. Following is the list of dead in the wreck: WILLIAM BARTLETT, brake man. ' ARTHUR H. LEE, fireman. JOHN KONIECSNY, wife and three children. MRS. GEORGE CICERO and three children.! (Continued on page 8) ton of senators, the trus and the tariff. KID McCOY IN LIMELIGHT. NEW YORK, Oct. 16. -Kid Mc Coy easily defeated Jim Stewart in a six-round bout here tonight. ' ANOTHER BALLOON IN SEA. BERLIN, Oct. 16V The North Sea still continues to give up the balloon victims. Word was received tonight that the German balloon ' Plaucn and its occupants were picked up by a fishing vessel 240 miles from Spurn head and landed tonight at Hull, England. The Hergezell is still un accounted for,