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About The daily morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1883-1899 | View Entire Issue (June 27, 1894)
1SI0BM PDBUC IJBR1RY ASSOCIATIOS. 2.: 'if i rr-1 r - g- :"""" " EXCLUSIVE TELEGRAPHIC ; PRESS REPORT. a VOI j. XLU, NO. 149. ASTORIA, OREGON, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 27, 1894. PRICE, FIVE CENTS. tiff Jit PAf l ' " a l .i 'v Srv pt Phantom, three years upwards, at prices itSPAt our store a child experienced buyer. Osgood PhgajitiiiE go. The The One Price Clothiers, 506 and 50U COMMERCIAL A Til AT is more cheerful ' Mellow, sweeter, richer The gurgle and ripple of their Hartz Mountain streams sound in their songs. Think of keeping all that melody ana joyous hU in obtain a nice one for so sfef little money as wo sell them. Our new lot are beauties. You'll enjoy looking at them. Maybe it's just the sort ing of giving to some Jriend. CALIFORNIA WINE HOUSE. fine f ines and Mqaofs. I.have made arrangements for supplying any brand of wines in quantities to suit at the lowest cash figures. The trade and families supplied. All orders delivered free in Astoria. A. W. UTZIflGElfc - Str. R. P. :i5 . dill Iieave fop Tillamook Every w Days as tfear es the uieathep mill permit. The steamer R. P. Elmore connects with Union Pacific steamers for Portland and through tickets are issued from Portland to Tillamook Bay points by the Union Pacific Company. Ship freight by Union Pacific Steamers. ELHORE, SANBORN & CO., - Agents, Astoria. UNION PACIFIC R. R. CO., Agents, Portland. $2 FOR All $80 LOT I BY BECOMING A YOU CAN GET A FIRST CLASS TO ASTORIA. LOTS WILL BE NOW IS THE TIME TO PROCURE Hot to Build a Home fr Tlie Packers of Choice lolumbia : River Salmon Ttielr Brands Alori PkgCo .Astoria. Booth A.rk'sCo Astoria. Coin mblaKiverPkgCo Astoria Elmore Samuel Astoria. George Barker A stof la. i. 0. Ha Dtburn ft Co.! Astoria J, Q Megler ft Co BrookBel J Tlhcr.aon-s Pkg Co- .j Astoria tag, - i bat .Reality. .Don't cliase the will o'-tho -wisp "bargains" and; "cheap sales." The best id always worth a fair price. It is first clans -jrood that, we sell,in Mens' and' Boys' Cloth ing, Furnishing Goods, Hats, Caps, Boots and Shoes, Trunks, Valises, and everything in wearing apparel for men or boys from not to be undersold. buys as cheaply as the most Hatters and Furnishers STREET, ASTORIA, OR. than the song of a canary? muel; you never listened to a poor cage wiien you can .of a present you were think Welcome everywhere. GRIFFIN ct REED. fffaln Street, Astoria, Oregon, ELMORE 'srir. - : - : I MEMBER OF HILL'S LOT CLUBS LOT IN HILL'S FIRST ADDITION DELIVERED WEEKLY. X, A L ) and Locations. kt ! 1 I Atoria Fk'gCo.' ! Kinney's M.J.Kinney. . 'Astoria........ Juuu A. Dvvliu. . I oZi?ltli:, A-Booth to -m .. jcockufl putting m Co..J9an KfanclMO I Vsmolla Elmore, Sanborn I Wuite Star ; Co iiiona JlK-!W ft Barker' Astoria. J.O.Hanthorn&t'o J. 0. IlantborD Astoria - ! .1 St. George- J. G. Megler... .. BiOAkfleld Wo 3 TiV" r-ihnn.n-a .bcar.ilinarian , i-k.v, A..t ori . ICAN LE Largest Convention in History of the Organization. R?AD. A SIGNIFICANT LETTER Senator Don Cameron's Strong; Plea lor Silver Woman's Suffrage .. Resolution .Refused. , Asaoclated Prey. Denver, June 26. Standing room was at a premium at the National Republi can League convention today In the Broadway Theatre. The number of vis itors in the city is estimated at 6,000,' of whom about one-third are delegates. The committee on resolutions practical ly decided in advance to frown down all Issues, Buch as the free coinage of sil ver and woman suffrage. Nevertheless, it is the intention of some delegates from the silver states to make a fight In the convention. F. C. Goudy, presi dent of the state league, welcomed the delegates in a long speech. He savagely attacked Gov. Walte and the Populist Dolicv. and promised that Colorado would be redeemed at the next eleotlon. President Tracy then delivered his an nual address. The roll call following immediately after the president's address showed 40 states and teirltoiies represented, the largest number in the history of the or ganization. Some of the delegations were very large. Iowa reported D4, Kan sas 51, Minnesota' 44, Mississippi CO, Wyoming 50 delegates and visitors. When Oregon was called the chairman answered, "Here, with 16,000 majority." Vermont answered "Here, with 20,000 majority." When the Carnot resolution came up objection was made on the ground that the president of the United States had already expressed the sympathy of him self and the American people. A dele gate shouted that Grover Cleveland did not represent all the people of the United States. This retort aroused the ire of Senator Saunders, of Alontana, who said: "Where the Republican par ty assembled In any form lacks patriot ism, so that the president of its country does not speak its sentiments to foreign nations, then we had better build the fires of patriotism anew. I don't care what your personal opinion of Grover Cleveland is, he represents as president every citizen of the United States. 'How about Queen Lil?" irreerently interrupted a delegate, but the Montana man ignored the question. The venerable Henry B. Blackwell, of Massachusetts, offered a resolution fav oring woman suffrage. It was referred to the committee on resolutions. Delegate Herrlngton, of Arizuna, in troduced a resolution for the free coin age of gold and Bllver. Ex-Gov. Prince, of New Mexico, sub mitted a resolution demanding the 'im mediate admission of New Mexico to statehood, and favoring a Pan-American conference of all the nations of the western hemisphere to agree upon a bl- metallia monetary system. Resolutions for the protection of the merchant marine, on education at na tional expense and on the re-establishment of the McKlnley protective idea were offered and referred. A large number of letters of regret were then read from prominent Repub- leans. Judge Thurston read a letter from Senator Don Cameron, of Penn sylvania whose name wa.i greeted with applause. Cameron says: "All Europe and all America are in trouble. Every one admits that the world stands on the edge of a revolution, social and political; but everyone shrinks from it. We all see danger before us. We all want to avoid It. To those of us who have had chiefly In mind the struggle between silver and gold, this is a question which for the moment presses hardest. A sin gle gold standard seems to us to be working such ruin and violence that nothing can stand. If Its influence is to continue for the future, at the rate of its action during the 20 years since the gold standard took possession of the world, some generation not very remote will see in .the broad continent of Amer ica only half a dozen overgrown cities, keeping guard over a mass of capital, and lending It to a population of depen dent laborers on the mortgag of their growing crops and handiwork. A vast majority In all the parties agree that the single gold standard has been, is. and must be a material disaster of the worst kind, and what Is still more strange, almost the whole world sympa, thizts with us. Nine-tenths of man kind ore hrwtile to a single gold stand ard. Yet Indon bankers say we must submit, and we have submitted. We want real money-onln carrying intrin sic value; yet If England succeeds In her obstinate effort to destroy the value of silver, for coinage, nothing can save v from paper. England may well suc ceed: she seems already to be on the point of success, greater than hr gov ernment wanted, and In that case irrc dcemabla paper fiat monVy Btares us in the face. Something, then, must be decided and quickly, tor the delay Itself Is likely to be decision. The Republican party must either fijt the single stand arc;' of the nation orreject It. This time we can no longer ecape the Issue, and whatever we do must be dono openly. The Republican party alone has power to restore activity to industry and to carry on our society for at least another generation without further disaster. You "nave only to adopt the platform. The party has always maintained the na tional principle of high tariff.' You. Whose deepest and best interes's depend upon its success, have alone power to add 'Freo silver. " ; The committee on location decided to night to recommend that the next con vention be held at Dee Moines, Iowa, .The final vote was: Dee Moines, 13; .Minneapolis, 12. : ... The committee on rules will report to morrow In favor of allowing each state to cast its full vote to. which It is en, titled, regardless of the number of dele. gates present. The minority report op posing this plan will be presented. . A PECULIAR CASE. California Supreme Court Decision ol - Peculiar Interest. San Francisco, June 26-The state su preme court rendered a 'decision today cf peculiar political Interest. In thf gubernatorial campaign of 1S90 it was charged by the Democrats that Mark ham, the Republican Anlldate, favored the Chinese, and In support of this as sertion a letter was printed in which Markham was said to have written this sentence: . "I am glad that. Irish crowd are out, and hope the Chinamen will be all right.". . The Republicans promptly charged that the letter was a forgery, and Ir win C. Stump, the chairman of the Re publican state central committee, pub licly offered H,000 ftr the production of the genuine letter la Markham's hand writing containing the statement.'' After five days, Russell J. Adelson,cbairman of the Democratic committee, produced the letter and demandeLjuJf.OOO. The genuineness of ,the letter could not, be disputed, but Stump did not pay the money, and was sued by Wilson. The lower court held that the claim was a legal one, and the supreme court today affirmed that decision. A DULL DAY IN STOCKS. New York, June 26. Speculation was very dull today and the volume of busi ness was lighter than on any day for weeks past, but the tone of the market was firm and trading was distributed more generally through the list than usual. The better tone was due, per haps, entirely to the statement made by President Cleveland as to the codltion of national finances. The confident manner in whoh the president spoke of the affairs of the treasury seenved to have the effect at home and abroad of stimulating the purchase of American securities. PENNOYER'S PARDONS.' Salem, Or., June 26. Gov. Pennoyer today pardoned from the penitentiary the following prisoners: S. F. Murphy, sentenced from Baker county February last, to one year for embezzlement as city treasurer of the sum of $4,119; Jas. Hards, sentenced from Jackson county, May, 1883, to a term of 15 years, for manslaughter. More than 25 years ago Hards killed his father-in-law and dis appeared from the country. About two years ago he returned, was arrested and convicted of the crime. FREIGHT CAR MILEAGE. Chicago, June 26, At a meeting of the exeoutive committee of the Western Trunk Line Association today it was agreed that, beginning in August, the mileage on all kinds of freight cars in terchanged between railioad companies, including private cars, but excepting re frigerators, should be one-half cent per mile. This la a reduction of one-quarter cent. PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATIONS. Washington, June 26. The president sent the following nominations to the senate today: Charles Dekay, of New York, to be consul general at Berlin; William Meyer Little, of North Caro lina, to be consul at Tegucigalpa, Hon duras. YALE WINS. New Haven, Conn., June 26. Yale beat Harvard In the final game today for the intercollegiate baseball champion ship by a score of 2 to 0. OVERCOME BY THE HEAT. Washington, June 26. Senalor Talmer was overcome by the heat this after noon and was forced to retire from the senate chamber. HILL STILL FIGHTING All His Amendments Regularly Voted Down. PULLMAN BOYCOTT COMMENCED Carnot's Body Arrives in Paris Much Sympathy Shown at Rome ami Elsewhere. Associated Press Washington, June 26. The senate en tered upon the thirteenth week of the tariff debate today, resuming the con sideration of the Income tax. Hill with drew the amendment offered Saturday to strike out the provision exempting the interest on United States bonds from the operation of thei tax. He then maved to exempt Btate, county and municipal .bonds. He argued that the taxation of state bonds by the federal government would be a direct attack upon the administration of the states If the federal government had a right to diminish the value vt (f.a.te bonda and securities. It had the riyi.ii'to de stroy them. The amendment, woa lost by a vote of 15 to 30. 1T4 ' THE PULLMAN STRIKE. Cincinnati, O., June 26. The mananrer Of the Pullman shops in Ludlow, Ky., has posted a notice that all striking cm ployts who do not return immediately to work will be discharged. , Twenty eight strikers returned todiy. Omaha, June 2C.r-Four hundred mem bers of the American Railway Union in Omaha are prepared to carry out the Pullman boycott order to the letter. The American Raillway Union Is, strongb represented here In all the roads except the Burlington. The Union Pacific han dles both the Wagner and Pullman cars, or.d hence can dispense with the lttw. . Chicago, June 26.Chlef of Police Kennan was today uxked by the rail read companies using -Ptiiltnftrfc cars for protection in case of trouble from the big boycott by. the American. Railway Union. Police officers will bo placed in the yards of all the railroads. Cincinnati, June 26. By nn order from President Debs, of the'Amerlcan Railway Union, the Pullman boycott was declared off hero today at noon. Mr. Phelan, who was sent hero by President Debs, state thut this is aim ply a postponement. He says the Amer ican Railway Union don't wont to tie up travel until arbitration has been re sorted to. Chicago, June 26. The threatened strike to enforce the boycott of the Pull man cars was inaugurated at 8 o'olock tonight, when the American Rallwuy Union ordered the Illinois Centrul men out. The switchmen were the first to obey and quickly walked out, tying up suburban, as well as express trains ser vice. The strike, it is asserted tonight, will Immediately extend to the St. Paul and Kansas City, the Wisconsin Central, the Northern Pacific, the Southern Pa cific and the Santa Fe. CARNOT'S BODY IN PARIS. Paris, June 26. The funeral train bearing the remains of the murdered president arrived here this .morning. The ceremonies at the railroad terminus consisted only of a formal transfer of the remains to the prefect of the Seine. The casket was placed in a hearse and escorted to the Elysee palace. At the palcce the body was conveyed to the reception room, which hod been con verted Into a mortuary chapel. . Among those who witnessed the ar rival of the body of President Carnot at the palace was his coachman, who was so affected that he fell insensible and died from the shock. " ANARCHISTS REJOICING. Lisbon, June 26. Six Spaniards have been arrested ch.vged with having post ed red placards yesterday evening In the leading thoroughfares. The placards were inscribed: "Ravacholle, Valllant and Henri are avenged. Santo's arm ha rendered them Justice." Highest of all in Leavening PowerLatest U. S. Gov't Report : fi U.V ' : . -7 f i f i ASSASSIN SANTO ARRAIGNED. He Says He Is a Member of the Anar chists. Lyons, June 26. The assassin Santo, before tho examining magistrate today, declared himself an anarchist. He Bald he acted upon his own Initiative. He had not been engaged in any conspiracy. RIOTERS ARRESTED AT LYON3. Lyons, June 26. About 600 people were arrested during the rioting yester day, and a large number have been taken in custody today. The mayor of Lyons has Issued a proclamation, in which he says: "Malefactors who. In the gulBe of patriots, are committing deeds of vandalism! and pillage, will be punldhed as vulgar criminals." The mayor appeals to all honest citizens to assist the authorities in repressing riot ing. - FRENCH ATTACKS ON ITALIAN p. Lyons, June 26. Throughout the night Idlers throngod the streets and sacked the Italian stores and taverns. Large numbers of Italians are hopelessly ruin ed. Some have fled from Lyons. Scenes of disorder similar to these here are re ported from other towns, notably Gren oble and DUnon, and there is a pros pect of more rioting today, The troops supported tho police in their effort to restore order. SYMPATHY IN ROME. Rome, June 26. There has been today manifestations of sympathy for Franco in all the principal towns. At Mesina, crowds of people formed in a procession and marched to the French consulate, shouting "Long live France," "Death to the assassin." A, WARNING UNHEEDED. Parts, June 26. On June 20 the Pre fect Perault telegraphed to the minister of the Interior that n, dangerous Italian . anarchist named Santo had arrived at Celt. This Information wag Ignored, With' the tragedy for the consequence. ----- CARNOT'S SUCCESSOR. Paris, June 26. At a meeting of Ito- pi bllcan senator this afternoqn to de cide upon a candidate for president, the vote resulted: M. Caslmler Perlor, Hi; M. Dupuy, 15; scattering, 17. TRAIN ROBBED IN GEORGIA. Savannah, Go., Juno 26. Early thin morning six men, armed with rides, held up ai train at Monervllle. All the con tents of the Southern Express Com pany's safe were taken, the value of which Is not known. A posse with blcodhounds Is on the trail of the high waymen, i TO EXTEND. APPROPRIATIONS. Washington, June 26. A resolution will be presented In congress) extending the present appropriations 30 days, as It Is Impossible to get any regular appro priation bills through before thalrst of July. THE TARSNEY OUTRAGE. Colorado Springs, June 26. A reign of terror prevails here. Rumors of a con templated raid on account of the Tars ncy outrage fill the air. The Jull and public buildings are strongly guarded. STRIKE IN SCOTLAND. Edinburgh, June 26. Six thousand miners struck here today against a re duction of wages. The strike has thrown 20,000 steel workers out of employment. on account of lock of fuel. BLUM ON THE STAND. Portland, June 26. Nat Blum con tinued his testimony today In the Chi itere conspiracy case. His evidence Is the stmie as. given In the former trial. THE HOUSE. Washington, June 26. The senate bill making Lalor Day a legal holiday passed the house today. 1 c V ..." &' -: 1