' ' - ' 1 ' 11 ' " "" ' ' " III . I II. II. Ill III Vol. 18. No. 930. TREATY IS AGREED UPON Conference Over Moroccan Affairs Concludes Its Labors Com promise Effected. Algeoiras After a plenary session ih rmference on Moroccan reforms registered a complete accord and ap pointed a committee to eniDoay mis in a fnrmnl motocol. The ntwiu . , , nf - the worK in tne conference was announced in the foi , ffiini rwvmmimication: ., 1,0 c to n ntpfl its ine coxiiereuuc iuio i-v.'"- labors and accord it" established upon all points. It has aaopieu uci text oi tne remaining wuwvo v... cerning the state bank and customs lilt! UlXiXl a-i utti ' a " , , , , p nniifo nt norts. was adopted from tne kum" "i4"" it France will police four ports Moga dor Sam, Magazan and Rabat, and Snain two, Teteuan and Larache. France and' Spain together, will police .Tangier and Casa Blanca;-subjwt to an inspection of police. . The Dutch delegate announced that his govern mlnf decfinM no appoint an officer The conference - has appointed special committee to revise the texts of the agreement. . This .committee Will meet Monday to consider the final formalities of the protocol . Mr White, the American delegate, is of the opinion that the result is a satisfactory one, not only because the immediate future of Morocco is secured, but because the manner of tie set lemer is satisfactory to both Fi ance and Germany and removes the EeT frifon iraer national relations to normal, ine ndnciples for which Germany insisted integrity of Morocco and equal c5mme?c5 and economic rights there, Mr White thought were recognized wWle the special position claimed by France was also acuiu-, TALK OF COMPROMISE Anthracite Coalers May Modify t . Their Demands r,rvtPworth features m th Vbor tables t. aShractte coal regions. Nearly all ?, I mSratitms ta the fields remain ffid up andttere are no indications St wU wiU soon ,, rriners cohuuhicc - Son in New York considering plans, and at the conclus of the meeting it was reponeu c-tafivM had decided to A-,fv their demands. President 1UVU11 . tr malce any com nr, thA situation and refused to confirm or deny the report of conces sions. The Sub-committee of opera tors and miners will hold another meeting inursutijr uiciuuuu, hUiiiYiinnns fipld 'there were 111 .ll- more mines in operation than on the previous day ana muuy uiure aie iu resume within a day or two. The Unr nf man at wnrlf in thp Pitfa- burg district, however, was not as large as was expecieu. 1111s was aue, it is said to the. factional troubles within , the miners' union in that ter . A WEEKLY JOURNAL DEVOTED TO POLITICS, AGRICULTURE AND HOME ' . , ' - - 5 - ' : '- ' ". Lincoln, Nebraska, April 5, 1906 ritory. Negotiations are under way between the miners and f operators m several districts outside ' of the cen tral and i southwestern territories and while, no! agreements have yet been reached no serious trouble is antici pated. ' The piineworkers' leaders were much pleased when they learned that President Roosevelt had decided not to take a hand in the soft coal strike so long as the situation re mains as at present. Slight disturbances were reported from several points in the anthracite and bituminous" regions, but as a whole the strike affected territory re mains quiet. CARNEGIE ON RATE BILL. He Urges An Appeal Limit on Rate Rulings Andrew. Carnegie has taken a hand in the discussion of the railroad rate bill. He would limit the right of a railroad to appeal from the decision of the interstate commerce commis sion to cases in which the rate would affect the earnings of the railroads to the extent of $100,000 or $200,000 a year. In a' letter rfr,celygtft,jiere by John R. McLean Mr. Carnegie says: ine trouble with appeals to the courts lies in the fact that railroad companies have their permanent legal staff. It matters little ' if appeals be freely handed over to it, which will always retard and sometimes may defeat jus tice., " : ' .j "The great shippers who could af ford to fight appeals are those who benefit by secret rates or rebates. They are quiet and wish no change. "The small shippers must suffer, especially if appeals, can always be taken. They can spare neither the time nor the money it would require to obtain justice." JAPAN PREPARING FOR WAR Is Said to Have Designs Upon thj Philippine Islands Moscow. General Von Mack, the Russian representative of the Red Cross, has just returned here from Japan. He declares that the Japan ese are actively engaged in war prep arations, and he adds that it is evi dent that the enemy in view is Amer ica, and that operations are being planned against the Philippine Isl ands. : ' " ' DEPEW IS SERIOUSLY SICK Family of Senator Takes Great Pains ' - to Conceal His Condition. New York Promises that Senator Depew would return to his place by this time have not been fulfilled, for the reason that hopes . by his family for a . complete restoration of his health have been disappointed. He is still in retirement on the Elliott F. Shepard place, back of Scarborough- on-Hudson, on which he has been in seclusion for a month. So closely is the senator . guarded that only a few persons livng in the immediate neighborhood are. vable to say f rom , their own .knowledge . that he , is. in the "villa," as the house is known. Every meams has been taken to check the rapid decline into which he seemed to be railing. BIG FOUR TO CONFISCATE COAL Railroads Prepare for 'Strike and Mills May Be Affected. Springfield, Ohio The Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis (Big Four) railroad issued a general order today for the confiscation of aii coal in transit on all its-lines passing through this city. ' The ordr is said to be general on the entire system. Roads Must Reveal Secrets The railroads ' involved in the coal and oil investigation ordered by con gress must give to ; the interstate commerce commission lists of their stockholders , and umoiu m ucvn of proxies representing stockholders at their annual meetings. The com mission today directed the Pennsyl vania' the Baltimore and Ohio, the Chesapeake and Ohio, the Norfolk and Western, the West Virginia Cen ..i rwi TMHduirsr the Buffalo, Jlo- Chester and Pittsburg, and the New York Centraband uuuson mvw.na.r road companies to lurmsn me wip ing information: "A statement snowmg ane name and location of all "coal mines upon the said lines of road or upon the lines1 of other roads in which tne companies are interested, giving the u oVi cnh mat mine for car distribution, when car distribution is made -upon a oasis mvoivms , -c rating of mines. " , , , , "A list of names of stockholders at a last date when stock books were closed and including the postofllce address of each stockholder, if that will not occasion delay in complying with this request, and is cases where the last dividend was paid to persons not stockholders of record, the names and postofflce address of such .per- S"A list of the names of stockholders present in person at the last annual meeting and a list of the1, names of stockholders voting by proxy, together with the names of persons acting as proxy at , such meeting and a blank form of the -proxy used. "Maps of the lines of railway owned nn,,tofi. nln man or maps of any ljses of railway in which the companies are interested. .t 1 frritnries served iviaia jl ic v."".- i-- by the companies or by companies m which they are interested, showing the location of each coal'mine from which coal is offered lor , snipmeni. To Place Meats on Free List To prevent the beef trust monopo-ui-ntr hnnifi markets Representative Byrd of Mississippi has introduced a bill proposing that beef, pork, bacon, hams, meat extracts and all products manufactured from meat be piaceu tho frpp list. In explaining his bill, he says that, with open competi tion, the meats of tne Argentine re V4iillir anfl Australia, carried in re frigerator ships, should force down the prices to the consumer. c.ri 41 nn for a vear's subscription to The Independent and receive Mr. . MB tM 1. . Berge's book, "Tne -ree rass oriDcry System," free as a premium. This offer applies to full paid aavance sud scriotions only. LIFE Subscription $1.00 ROOSEVELT SURRENDERS Consents to Court Review Amendment to Rate Bill, Granting Courts Power to Suspend Rates Washington, D. C, April 4. (Spe- iJ Tl ....l- J-l. til., citti.j lucuiKuiaiit! Buiuc uitti inu minates the faces of Senators Aid rich, Elkins and Keane this week speaks volumes to the experienced newspaper correspondent, who by long experience is enabled to judge of the mental condition of these legislative warriors by their exterior in spite of their efforts to conceal it. 1 Senators-Allison, Cullom, 'Dolliver, Clapp and Long, Attorney General Moody and interstate commerce com missioners Knapp and Piouty were called' to "the White , House by the president Saturday aiternoon. as soon as they- assembled the president; submitted to them a court review . amendment for the rate bill that met the approval of all present. This meetinc haLJontt. Jaeen . predicted by those who know the president most intimately, and knew otme pressure that was heiner hroueht to bear unon him "to avoid a split in the party. A few of the president s ardent admir ers have insisted all along that the president would hold out to the ead for railroad rate regulation that would benefit the country, and that tne rail roads would never be able to force him to surrender. But those who know the president best took a differ ent view of the matter altogether. They do not regard him as a strong man in the sense that Cleveland was strong, nor in the sense that Aldrich and Elkins are strong. These latter are men of iron will and resolution ranahlft of withstanding any onslaught that might be' made upon them by adversaries. The president meas ured by the characteristics named is not in the same class with Cleveland, Aldrich, Elkins and many others in public life. The amendment to the rate bill in troduced by Senator Long on Mon day representing the views of the pres ident in the matter of court review is a sore disappointment to his friends, who regard it as a back down and a surrender of the "most vital prin ciple at stake between the railroad and anti:railroad forces In the senate. The democratic senators are heart ily In favor of rate regulation, so much so that they turned in heartily and loyally to support the president and to aid and assist him to the ut most in perfecting the rate bill 'and making it effective for the purposes it was designed. This was shown by the conference held at Senator New land's residence where the Bailey amendments were considered. Much chagrin is felt by democratic senators over the inexcusable blunder of the president in ' yielding to the conten tion of the railroad, senators, when it was entirely unnecessary to do so. One of them stated today that "sup posing the Bailey, amendments should carry and the bill pass, while the dem ocratic senators and the democratic