GATHEREDAT HAGUE Delegates ol All Nations Will Dis cuss Peace Plans. DIVIDE NORTHWEST f ORTY SIX POWERS REPRESENTED Action on Disarmament Question to Be Watched by Whole Civ lllzed World. Each Line Take a Distinctive Field From Which the Other la Ef fectively Barred. The Hague, June 15. With the rep resentatives ol 40 countries gathered here for the opening of the second peace conference, which will take place to day, there is a remarkable contrast be tween the sentiments prevailing upon the eve of the original conference of 1809 and today, which has become a aubjeot of general comment. In 1809, although less than half the present number of governments were represent ed, the hope of the world wbb hiah and there was a vision of disarmament and the banishment of the curse ol war from among civilized peoples. Men who were here eight years ago recall how the delegates of the powers met in response to the generous appeal of the emperor of Russia and entered upon their work with the zeal and enthusi asm of men upon a holy mission. Yet three months later this dream faded .and nothing beyond the adoption of a pious vow remained of the avowed od. iect of the conference. The powers favcring a discussion of a proposal to reduce armaments lear mat, unless it is brought up, the whole Idea may fall into universal ridicule. At the outeet It is seen that the important thing is to avoid discord, and with the - purpose of permitting a further exchange of views and in order that the delegates may get better acquainted, it has been -decided already to postpone the second session of the conference until Tues day. Some optimists incline to the -oDinion that the fact that the difficulties are fully appreciated in advance ia only Jikelv to make the ultimate result richer. United Railways Defer Dividend New York, June 15. The directors ot the United Railways Investment company, it was announced today, have determined that it will be inadvieable at present to take action with respect to the semi-annual dividend on pre ferred stock which is ordinarily pay jible In July. This etep was taken, it is stated, in view of the existing strike situation in San Francisco, and to the -end that the Investment company might be enabled to afford to the United Railroads of San Francisco the fullest measure of support. The divi dfind has been 2M per. cent semi .annually. Japanese Almost Shut Out. San Francisco, June 15. "The' pae age of the law by congress restricting 1he admission of Japanese laborers in -the mainland has" practically eliminat d the immigration of that class of Asiatics." said Commissioner of Immi ration North yesterday. "During May jabout 700 Japanese laborers arrived from Honolulu without paEsports for h mainland, but thev were all in transit, and went to British Columbia The border is being watched to see -that thev do not come back into the United States." Orchard Is Corroborated. Boise, Idaho, June 15. The prosec tlon in the Steunenberg murder trial yesterday, entering In earnest upon the aiiVatentiation and corroboration of Harrv Orchard's testimony, showed continuous thread of evidence connec tion George Pettibone's store in len Ter with Orchard at San Francisco, en. Bfffid on the Bradley murder plot uartlv developed another direct line by which it is honed to show that Hay. -wood engaged and paid Steve Adams for Tth pame desperate worK, ano aaaeo. teeveral touches of confirmation to Orch card's general Btory. No Cause for Alarm, Says Komura London, June 15. The Japanese am bassador, Baron Komura, today issued ' statement to the press reciting the lactB in respect to the attack upon the Japanese restaurant in San Francisco May 20 and the negotiations which fol lowed between Washington and Tokio, concluding as follows: "As you will observe from the above statement, the whole matter is pursuing its normal course, and there is absolutely nothing which would justify the alarmist ru mors emanating from irresponsible Washington, June 13. From evi dence given today before the Interstate Commerce commission it Is very plain that J. J. Hill and E. H. Harriman have mapped out the Northweet, each taking a distinctive territory, from which the other is effectively barred. Particularly is this true of the lumber business. It is practically impossible, under the existing freight rates and ar rangements, for Oregon lumbermen to compete with Puget Sound in markets tributary to the Northern Pacific and Great Northern, and likewise impossl ble for Puget Sound manufacturers to Invade territory tributary to the Ham- man lines And so far as the respective railroad lystems are concerned, neither has any desire to invade the other's territory, IN RUSSIAN PRISON. American Citizen Wore Red Necktie In . Russian City. Riga, Russia, June 11. Two cases 111 and Harriman Roads Aaree of reat lnterest to AmerlcanB were heard at a special session of the Rus- Upon Territory. URT OREGON AND WASHINGTON heard at a special slan Supreme Court, sitting here. One was the case of Theodore Smith, of Astoria, Oregon, who was arrest ed because he had on a red necktie and was charged with being In sym pathy with the rebels irr the Baltic provinces. The other was the case of August Sibbul, an Esthonlan farm er, who had been arrested for read ing a translation of the American Declaration of Independence to a meeting of peasants. Both men had been condemned to death, but Influential friends had ob tained for them a new trial. After hearing the evidence produced, the court sentenced Smith to prison for 10 months and Sibbul for 18 months. Both men were defended by Vladi mir Chvolsen, an eminent criminal lawyer. He is trying now to have Smith, a naturalized citizen or the United States admitted to nan, as ne will carry the case to the Russian Senate. Sibbul said to your corres pondent: ' I beg you to express my most heartfelt sentiments to the American people, whose glorious declaration of independence will be read now in the Russian orisons. It nas caused me hard suffering, but I am glad I read It. I have not been any way a rebel or a terrorist ana Know oniy my farm work. I am a farmer, just as the Americans who wrote and read NEWS FROM THE NATIONAL CAPITAL Both acknowledge their utter incom petency to handle the business that is rttrvt (nam aA a a nil iVonta tst Kfitina compelled to take care of the surplus of this great manifesto of freedom were the other. Washington Officials to Attend Pub lic Lands Convention. Washington, June. 12. The pres- dent was in conference with Secre tary Garfield,' Senator Carter, Com missioner Ballinger, of the Land Of fice, and Director Newall, of the Re clamation Service, concerning the public lands convention In Denver ten days bence. It will be attended by those of other government officials, Including Secretary Wilson and Forester Pln- chot. . While no statement regarding the day's conference was announced It is understood that the administrative officials will go to Denver prepared to explain and, If necessary, to de fend the course that has been pur sued. It will be contended that the plan has been to preserve public lands for the actual settler and to regulate the forest reserves so as to conserve the water supply and protect the timber, The withdrawal of coal lands by executive order a year ago will be defended as necessary for proper classification, and It will be shown that much of the withdrawn land has been restored. The principal at tack Is expected to be made on the forest reserve policy, but Mr. Plnchot and others will be prepared to con tend that all has been done in the public interest. . At the close of the morning session Mr. Jeffreys, attorney for the Gould system, announced to the commission that the Missouri Pacific and Denver & Rio Grande, which connect with the Harriman lines at Ogden, had no objec- t-l l (IrvnAntnn ilia Pnf anA naianrmv " JAPAN AGAIN AROUSED. Widely Circulated Paper Asks People to Take Hand. Tokio, June 13. The Mainichi, pub lished at Osaka and claiming to nave a circulation of 250,000, expresses anger today at the reported recent attack on a Japanese horticulturist at Berkeley, committed farmers, "On the anniversary of the declar ation of American independence l try to express with my fellow-suffer ers here our respect ior mis great historical day. We will tear up our shirts and paint the pieces with the stars and stripes and so make little American flajrs. which we will wave out of the prison windows." It Is possible that both men win be exiled to Siberia, although neither reallv committed any political ot- fense. for the wearing of a red neck tie and the reading of the American declaration of independence is no where in the world listed among the statutory crimes In spite of the strongest protests in the Douma against the cruelties by the Russian prison Cal. ItBavs: and police officials on tne political Tho niifmoo lnmnTmtrat,Mit.Vifl imno. prisoners, they are aany torturing tency of the California authorities to protect our compatriots. Now is no time to rest assured on the stereotyped diplomatic assurances frcm the Wash' ington government. Only two weeks after a positive declaration to take pre ventive measures to safeguard Japanese rights comes the Berkeley outrage "The persnoahty of President Roose. velt towers high ' among living great men and deserves full confidence, but promises, however high sounding and reassuring, and the promise maker, however high in character, Is of no val ue whatever if unaccompanied by deeds. the prisoners In a most brutal way, Mr. Smith said: "I have been beaten four times De. cause I reruseo to eat tne nauseous Drison food. My brother provided me with better food, which was brought to me from outside the prison. DtSTROYS THE TRUTH. British War Office Suppresses Honest History of Boer War. London. June 11. England Is not to know the real truth about tne Daai. Tirol Tn sava tha r pnn t p t inn n "The powerleseness of the California Lf Pertoin" well-known generals and and federal governments is thus ae- officials, the war office has had Col monstrated and it only remains to take 0nel Henderson's unfinished "history the work of protection in our own hands. "That the outrages are of limited local occurrence is not a sufficient ex planation." HAYWOOD'S CASE HURT. WILL EXPLAIN PLAN. TOKIO WAR PLOT. of the Boer War" destroyed. It was written as the official history by the greatest English writer on military subjects since Napier, but its author died before completing it. After Colonel Henderson's deatn the war office examined his work and found that it was much too out spoken about the blunders and graft that distinguished the campaign. It has therefore entirely suppressed his work, and order the compilation or an entirely new history by a, staff of officers under the direction of Gen eral Sir Frederick Maurice, who Is Attorney for the Defense Injures His Own Theory. Boise,. Idaho, June 13. --Again yester day the aimlesslness of the defense in the Havwood case was illustrated on several, occasions. It has been apparent perhaps the only military writer who all through the cross examination of oouio aaequateiy derson s place hldwmnM Mr Richardson nlstory will deal gently with the rep SLtl0!! of the distinguished mud- UUULiuoiB muuiju oaJLiy nuu ifouo jii vu i jgjtg contraaicuoQB. fPtinM mill Ka n V fKrAA Vt Aiiva r9 v.a ,.i oin f r,.,nf I Washington, June nlana. hut it mav reaulre much less Roosevelt, as a member of the. blue time. Most everything has been brought lodge of mason, made an address at out in the cross examinaion that the the laying of the cornerstone of the state wants, but the relations of the Pfmple which U , k ., . ' ..,. , , . . ed at- Thirteenth street ana New witness with the Cripple-Creek deteo- Y0rk avenue. The gavel and trowel tives will be gone over to some extent, aaA raa trsa OQmo . thoo i,aen hv and severla other matters will be fully pregident Washington in laying the explained which have been only touched cornerstone of the United States Cap- 1 1 f i. 1 . . . A n Afl a. 1 Stone. 11. President unon by I the cross examination ana were not gone into on direct examlna tion. sources. Wlaconaln Senate Beets 2-Cent Rate. Madison, Wis., June 15. The senate -today by vote of 21 to 6 killed the 2-cent fare railway bill. Demand Indemnity for Riot. Bah Francisco, June 13. The Japan eee residents of San Francisco, it is said, intend to demand an indemnity of the United States government ior the itol, September 18, 1793, and the Bible was used by Fredericksburg Lodge No. 4, of Virginia, when Pres ident Washington became a member of the fraternity. Cruiser Coming. Washington, June 11. The eruU er Charleston, flagship of the Pacific alleged attack upon the Horseshoe res- squadron was ordered to Portland m,1 iuna ,mi, to participate in the rose festival, be- ,uuUWuu. r. vv .v lnnlnjS June 19 and to remain in they say nave oeen inn1Ctea upoa mem. the h - bof and take part ln tne Ihey nope aiso oy Dunging aipiomauc Fourta 0f juiy celebration, pressure to bear upon the government when It was ascertained that the at Washington to suppress anti-japan- Charleston, drawing 25 teet of water, eee agitation in California. This, it is could safely cross the bar ad ascend sa d. was the aim ot Lount rnoaa's re- tne river to roruana, tne president cent visit to Viscount Aoki, ambassa dor at Washington. Two New National Parks. N Washington, June 15. If the neces sary legislation can be secured in con gress next winter, a national park will be created along the Columbia river to embody the land on which Multnomah Falls is located and another national park will be located in the extreme southwest corner of Oregon, to embody land on which a grove of big trees is situated. These two tracts were here tofore embraced in forest reserve with drawals, but have been now withdrawn for the purpose of creating national parks on condition that the necessary legislation can be obtained. Such legis lation will be recommended by the sec retary of the interior next winter. Montana Lands Restored. Washington, June 15. By order of the secretary of the interior about 250, 240 acres temporarily withdrawn for the proposed Deer Lodge and Ruby Mountains national forest and for an addition to the Helena national forest, Montana) about 220,000 acres with drawn for an addition to the Madison forest, Montana; about 39,640 acres withdrawn for forestry purposes near the Snowy mountain national forest, Montana; about 50,880 acres adjoining Crazy mountain forest-, Montana; about 20,320 acres near Bitter Root focrest, Montana, have been restored fori entry. Senator Morgan Dead. Washington, June 14. United States Senator John Tyler Morgan, of Ala bama, died at 11:15 Tuesday night. Senator Morgan had been ln bad health for a numbe of years, but had more or less regularly attended the sessions of congress. He suffered from angina pectoris, which was the cause of his death. At the deathbed were his daughters, Miss Mary Morgan and Miss Cornelia Morgan, both of this city, and his secretary, J. O. Jones. Mr. Mor gan's home in Alabama was at Selma, where the funeral will take place. ' Changes In Army. Washington, June 12. The fol lowing board is appointed to meet at Walla Walla, Wash., to inspect ani mals purchased . under contract for the army: Colonel Edward A. Good win, Fourteenth Cavalry; Captain Alanzo Gray, Fourteenth Cavalry; Captain Edward F. McGlachlln, Jr., Fourth Field Artillery; veterinarian, Henry W. Peter, Fourteenth Cavalry. Major William H. Sage, Adjutant- General, Is relieved from duty ln this city and will proceed to Vancouver Barracks and report to the com manding general. New Northwest Postmasters. Washington, June 14. Postmasters appointed: Oregon Fairgrounds, Ma rion county, Harrison Doe, carrier; Henry H. Craig, substitute; Kent. Sherman county, Walter H. Bennett, vice 8. G. Donley, ' resigned; Provclt, Josephine county, Henry F. Bailey, vice H. L. Green, resigned. Washing ton Anatome, Asotin county, Earl E. Kirkpatrick, vice J. A. Bradley, resign ed; McMurray, Skagit county, John W. Blake, vice M. Larock, removed. Prcgresslve Party Would Demand In demnlty and Apology. Washington, June 11. That the Japanese-Pacific Coast and the Pro gressives, a political party of Jap anese, have entered Into an alliance which has the ear-marks of an Inter national conspiracy, with the over throw of the present ministry in Ja pan and the annulment f the clause ln the immigration bill excluding Japanese coolie labor from continen tal Unled States, as the ultimate ob jects, was learned authoritatively here. The preliminary steps ln this scheme, it is said, will be to induce the Tokio government to recall Vis count Aoki, the Japanese Ambassa dor to the United States, for the al leged acts of violence against Jap anese subjects residing in San Fran cisco. With this end in view, representa tives of the faction hostile to the Saonji ministry have been in Wash ington to consult with the Japanese Ambassador and the State Depart ment officials regarding the objec tionable clause in the immigration bill, the California school question and the recent riots in San Fran cisco. The report which they have sent to Tokio, It Is alleged, will form the basis of a systematic campaign to bring about anti-American demon strations ln Japan, and to force Min ister Hayashi, if possible, to demand indemnity and an apology on account of the Japanese disturbances in San Francisco. WANTS BETTER SERVICE. saw to it that tne nagsnip was tailed as above stated. de- Bovcott on Kosher Meat. oot i nem carea. Cleveland. June 13. A riot occurred uara '""" in the Jewish district today as the re- L twQ ce inspector9( flve 8UD. sultoia can piacea upon wie jvwmer lngpectorB and 37 policemen have meat shops. The Jews, angered over .-i, ha allowed to real en. The the reoent rise 01 4 cents & pouna ior authorities refused the request, as- meat, refuse to buy and are urging I sorting that such action would con others not to buy. itltute treason. Withdraw All Ferms of Entry Washington, June 15. The secretary of the interior has withdrawn from all forms of entry the land immediately surrounding Multnomah Falls, and al so that enclosing the Siskiyou big trees, both in Oregon, with the end in view of oreating national parks for the pro tection of the falls and trees. Washington Lumbermen Claim The Roads Are Inadequate., Washington, June 13. A case of more than ordinary Importance to the Puget Sound territory was heard by the Interstate Commerce Com mission. It was that of the Pacific Coast Lumber Manufacturers' Asso ciation, and other lumber organiza tions in the State of Washington, against the Northern Pacific, the Great Northern, the Oregon Short Line, the Union Pacific and 15 other railroad companies. The complain ants allege that the defendants re fuse to establish for their products, a route via Portland, Ore., between points in Western Washington and points in Wyoming, Colorado, Kan sas, Nebraska and other points in the Middle West, but require them to pay local rates on shipments to Portland, the shipments there to be transferred to other cars for ship ment to destination on the rate to distlnatlon from Portland. It Is also alleged that the defendant lines re fuse to ; interchange cars, and that they do not furnish enough cars. President at Oyster Bay. Washington, June 14. President Roosevelt left Washington today for his summer home at Oyster Bay. The party included Mrs. Roosevelt, Mrs. Cowles, the wife of Rear Admiral Cowles, Secretary and Mrs. Loeb and Mr. M. C. Latta, one of the assistant secretaries. ; They will reach Oyster Bay about 5 o'clock. The president hopes to pass a very quiet summer at Oyster Bay, and according to present plans, with probably not more than one exception, he will remain there continuously until he leaves for Can ton, O., for the unveiling of the Mc- Kinley memorial monument on Sep tember 30. The Roosevelt children are now at Oyster Bay waiting the ar rival of their parents. Complaint on Rates. Washington, June 12. The Fos ter Lumber Company of Tacoma to day submitted a complaint to the In terstate Commerce Commission against the Missouri Pacific North ern Pacific and other lines. It ia charged that on shipments of timber products from Washington to Tow ner, Colo., and Tribune, Kan., higher rates are exacted than for similar shipments to points ln the same state with longer hauls, the difference amounting to 18 cents per hundred pounds. ' Northwest Postal Affairs. Washington, June 13. Postmas ters appointed: Oregon Pajmer, Charles W. Brown, vice M. F. Dickson, resigned. Washington Clearwater, Benson L. Northrup, vice Robert A. Mason, resigned. W. A. McCoy has been appointed regular, Rollle Ranny sub stitute, rural free delivery carrier, route 1, at New Kamllche, Wash. Carrie Nation Arrested. Washington, June 14. Carrie Na tion, after haranguing a crowd in front of a down town saloon tonight, was ar rested on the charge of disorderly coa duct. She was released on $20 collateral. Pulllman Car Company Rebels. - Washington, June 15. In its answer to the case filed with the Interstate Commerce commission by the citizens of St. Paul, the Pullman company de nies the right of the commission to reg ulate its rates and attacks the constitu tionality of the railway rate law. New National Bank. Washington, June 12 The United States National Bank of Centralia, Wash., has been authorized to begin business with $100,000 capital. Chai. Gilchrist, president; J. W. Daubney, cashier.