i Ore HUoilcal gcK-lstl '7 J5JV1' COVERS THE MORNING FIELD ON THE LOWER COLUMBIA UBLIBHtt FULL AOOIATID PRISSIRIPOnT ASTORIA, OKEfiON. SATURDAY, MARCH 11. 1905. PRICE FIVE CENTS VOLUMK IVIV. NO. 12G. 1 V E 111 111', Kuropatkin's Entire Army Routed. SUPPLIES CAPTURED Fushun Also Fall Into the Hands of the Victorious Japanese Army. RUSSIAN FORCES RETREATING Kuropatkln'e Army Receives a Crush ing Defeat at the Hands of the Jap anese, Resulting in Heavy Loss of Men and Munitions and Supplies. St. Petersburg. March II, 2:30 ft. in. An official bullet In-received In this city last night from General Kuropat kin ihijh: "Ijml night nil our tirmli-n com nwiKi'd to ritr"iit." The greatest defeat In the history of thi Russian-Japanese war woa made known nt St. Petersburg last night, but only In ii paltry eight words from General Kuropnlklti to i:niTor Nicho las which was llung iiliout the streets In newspiipcr extra anil passed from mouth to mouth. Two thoughts fin un ci liiHiantly In the nilmla of every one, there were but two word on every Hp, "surrender," "peace," the for mer dreaded, thi Inter hoped for. Ht. Petersburg know nothlntc about the extent of the disaster, not even n dispatch from Kuropatkln. whether he l retreating, or whether Tie l'aaa la ett III open; whether he la endeavor ing to cut bin way through to aafety, or whether u pessimist believe, he ha taken to the mountain. If II be the lutter he will be Inevitable hemmed In nml starved Into a surrender as Marshal llaseulne wiia at Metx. The result of Oynma great turnliiK movoment ib'pemla almost entirely Uam Kawnniurtia army whKh Ima not yet been lociiteil definitely, nlthouKh It In NUpMiHed to lie movliiK oiiat towur.l Kuropiitkln'a line of retreat, HhouUI he reach the military road, which runa nlmoHt In a direct line from Kuahun to Tin I'naa before thw pnmuiKe of tho niiHHlan army, the circle would In come complete im NorIn (tuna are nlready In i-ommaiiil of the railway and nliould Hoon control the Mandarin road, which In but a abort dlKlance eat lf the nillroad. (l.Mienil Iteuneiikampffa forces mi aomewhat Icnb than 10)00 men, which haa bwn the extreme left mid ate In a recarloUH condition. With these exceptlona all the Kuaalan troop are now concentrated on roiida I.shIIiik northward. It may take another 24 houra before their fate la decided. Kven Hhould Kuropatkln extrlcale hlmaelf It la believed In Knropoan cnpltolH that jace la certain to fol low the lateat JapnneHe victory. The chIHiib of M. Iawolaky, Kuaalan ml later to Denmark, to Ht. l'eterabur to nlKht. who was formerly at Toklo, la omiHlilered alKnlllciint. No time will be lost In atartliiK iH'Kotlatlona aa noon na Kuaala lutlmatca a wlah to close tho war. Shortly after the fall of Port Arthur hlith ollUlala In the Jap anea foreign olllce arrived In London with authority to take up negotiations na soon aa Kuaala declared that ahe desired peace. The fate of the Kuaalan army at the battle of Mukden la summed up In a loss of a quarter of a million men and two thousand plecea of artillery, with which it was copftdently expected Gen eral Kuropatkln and his lieutenants could prevent the axlvnnoe of the Jap nneae beyond the Hhakhe and Hun rivers positions, but with the loss of so many men and most of their heavy guna, tho Kuaalan army la crlppleJ and will be compelled to surrender They have been driven from all their strong positions and are now rush ing northward, a disorderly, crushed remnant of an at my, and expect to be checked at Tie Tags, around which sr With hills which wits prepared for it d-fense after the bull l of Llao lining jut Hcptember, there being no Imiirt lit Unit tlmo that the Japanese would ullow Him defeated army to rent south of Tie Pas. ANARCHIST KILLED. Tried to Blown Up a Building With Bomb. HI. Petersburg. March 10. A Bt. Pet ersburg correspondent of the Dall Mall telugraphs as follows: At 4 o'clock tlil (Halurday) morning an ex plosion occurred In the center of the city at Voanacensky and Bolocholam orskalr (part of name ommltted on ac count of space), fiulnif Kt. Imtc ca thedral which blew mil (he Interior ami an apartment house, killing four men and four women. It was undoubtedly an accidental explosion of an anar chist's bomb, which killed the person who Intruded to uae tt. GOVERNMENT MUST PAY. Decision Against the Government for 13,000,000. New York. March 10. Judge Wheeler of the United Htates circuit court to day handed down a decision, which If sustained will coat the United Htates government five million dollars. This money the government will have to refund to the American Sugar Keflnlng Company for duties for sugar Imjiort ed from Cuba In 1903, and upon which thn company contended tliat a reduc tion of 20 per cent should be allowed under the rxlatlng treaty. h.wffl.bC INhKg.y hrdluapaupupupppj Nothing Doing at Denver. Denver, March 10. Pending a de. claliiu from the supreme court aa to tho right of the legislature to declare a vacancy existing in the office of gov ernor, further consideration of the I'eiibody-Adama gubernatorial contest has been postponed until next Monday TOTALY ANIHILIATED Disorganized Army Running for the Hills. SLAUGHTER WAS TERRIFFIC Russian 8upplies Have Been Cut Off, the Entire Army Is Demoralized and It le Only Question of Short Time When They Must Surrender. Nleuchwang, March 10. According to reliable Information received here the Itusslana have been drlvn out of Mukden and Kusliun. and. with the railroad cut, are retreating In a de inoralUed condition to the hill country toward the northeast. Detached isulles of Russians are roughly Intrenching with a view to checking the pursuit, but no great rear guard action la being fought. It will be ImiKisslble for the Kua slons to keep any sort of resistance for many days, as there are no means of provisioning In the rought country to which they are retreating. It Is believed that the Russians may attempt to reach Kliin, 225 miles northeast of Mukden, through the val leys, but a special Japanese corps from the direction of the Yulu river (prob ably General Kawivmaura's forces) threatens to cut them off. General Kurokl la advancing northwest and Is forcing the Russians against General Nogl-'s army. The caaualtlles on both aides have been enormous. The Russian Six teenth nrmy corps waa practically an nihilated at Tatchekluo. fright thou sand Russians fell nt Lcuktmupao. Toklo, March 10, S p. m. Field Mar shal Oyama telegraphs na follows un der date of today: "We captured a great number of prisoners, enormous quantities of arms, ammunition, provisions and other war supplies. There la at. present no time to Investigate the number of these." 8enator Indicted. Indianapolis, March 10, The county Jury today Indicted ex-Senator K. O. Baker on a charge of bribery In con nection with the recent cigarette leg islation In this ntnte. Baker has di sappeared. STRIKE ENDED Rumored Trouble Without Foundation. STRIKE NOT JUSTIFIED New YorK Labor Unions Violated International Laws of Unions. COST ONE MILLION DOLLARS Chief Stone and President Mahon of tho Brotherhood of Locomotive En gineers Refuse to Sanction Strike nd Men Return to Work at Once. New York, Mar.ch 10. A scare among employes on the elevated and subway lines early today over reports that the strikers were gathering at various points for the purpose of dem onstratlng their strength la stated to have arisen from news brought by a spy who was present at a striker meeting In Marlon hall. The police authorities who were at once notified hurriedly massed reserves at alrategl cal points while guards were doubled at manv stations along the lilies. False alarms by telephones added to the ex cltemenl and squads of Officers who rushnif In sitveml directions In re sponse to their alarms found no sign of trouble. The rumors of trouble appeared to grow Into a certainty when the police reserves were sent In patrol wagons from the Harlem stations to the car barns at One Hundred and Forty-fifth street. Police headquarters had been notified and the patrol wagons were tilled with 15 men apiece and hustled, to the bams. Tao hundred strikers were said to have assembled but they disappeared before the police arrived. It waa said that they had done nothing but stand about and talk and they scattered slowly In all directions with no apparent Intent of causing a dis turbance. The Killce remained about for half nn hour and then were sent back to their station houses. Similar results attended alarmist re liorts from the Bronx. Rest came to the almost exhausted olllce force of the Interborough com pany when the statements refusing to Indorse the strike and warning the men to return were Issued by Chief Stone und President Malum of the Iirotherhood of Locomotive Knglnecrs and the Amalgamated Association. Re gardless of the fact that the strike leudfVa denounced their statements and declared they would continue the fight the clerks deserted their posts In the company's general olflces and when home to sleep for the first tims since last Monday night. The recruit mg stations were closed within 3 minutes after Mr. Stone's prononncla. mento was Issued, and announcement was made thoj regular running sched ules on the subway nnd elevated line would be resumed today, Generul Manager Hedley said it was quite probable that for a few days there mlglrt i4 temporary Interfer ence, but that now every place on the system was essentially filled and all that remained to be done was the per fect adjustment of the new mm to their places. Various estimates have been made as to the losses entailed by dry goods merchants and theater proprietors during the three days when the strike was moat felt. In round numbers the estimates agree that these two lines, of business alone sustained a lis In receipts during Tuesduy, Wednesday and Thursday aggregating $750,000. The falling on began early on Tues day. Store proprietors then declared that no such slump hnd been known In this city since their earliest recol lection. All records for meagre re ceipt were broken. Hut conditions grew worse on Wednesday and still worse Thursday. Thirteen great de partment stores In what Is known as! the fhlppl'ig district figure largely !r. these estimate. AFTER CHIEF HUNT. Charges Preferred Are Now Being In vestigated. Portland, March 10. Chief of Police Charles H. Hunt will have an Inning before the tiollrc committee tomorrow afternoon, when he will be given op- oorunlty to explain away the grave charges of failure to perform his duty, made by Councilman A. F. Flfgel and supported by evidence presented be fore the committee yesterday after noon. It Is announced by the commit teemen today that the Investigation will be most thorough, and all who de sire to give evidence will be heard. The direct charge against Hunt Is that he willfully failed to enforce tht. ordinance closing saloons at 1 o'clock In the morning. It was announced this morning by members of the committee that the case would not be continued, the reason to be given In a statement to be pre pared for publication by the commit tee, but later the announcement was made that the committee had conclud ed to puahe the Investigation to an end. Intjreit of Shipping. Pekin, March 10. The chief ship ping firms of Tientsin have approach ed the Prltish authorities advocating active measures against the danger of the floating mines In the gulf of Pe Chi Li. The British authorities com municated with Yuan Shan Kan. vice roy of Chill province, asking for his co-operation In the work of destruc. tlon. suggesting that he send a Chi nese man of war to aaslst. Admiral Noel. In command of the British fleet on the China station, who was com munlcated with, Is very desirous that all the authorities cordlully co-operate, as the imssage of the northern waters is ettended with considerable danger. Representatives of Stanford Estate Doubt Foul Play. THE VERDICT, IS NOT FINAL A Thorough Investigation of the Mur der Theory Claimed to Have Been Established by the Coroner's Jury Will Be Made by Relatives. San Francisco. March 10. In a state ment to the Associated Press tonight, Mountford Wilson, one of the legal representatives of the Stanford estate, said that although the coroner's Jury at Honolulu had declared that Mrs. Stanford had been murdered by the administration of strychnine poison In bicarbonate of soda, and that she was murdered by either close friends or relatives or philanthropists, he Is not prepared to accept the verdict as final, as the testimony of a half dozen phy sicians state that the symptoms Just prior to her death would Indicate that she died of angina metpectorls, a dis ease of the heart. A thorough Inves tigation of the various phases of the mystery has resulted In nothing tangi ble, and nothing to Justify an arrest. Another Riot. New York, March 10. Dispatches from San Marco, in Lamia, near Man fredonla, repim. according to a Her ald dispatch from Naples, that peas ants, provoked to riot by local mat ters, attempted to storm the custom house nnd town hall. There was a con flict with the troops, who had 15 wounded, while the rioters had numer ous Injured nnd four dead. Chadwick Trial. Cleveland. March 10. Saturday will see the close of trial of Mrs. Chadwick and the case will probably go to the Jury during the afternoon. The entire day was devoted to arguments. Fairbanks a Mason. Indianapolis, March 10. Vice Presi dent Fairbanks will come to Indiana polls the latter part of this month to take Intervening degrees In Masonry between the Blue lodge and the Thirty second degree. He was Initiated Into the Masonic order December 27. MURDER DOUBTED WIN D Arrested in Portland for Murder. SHOT E. G. SHARRETT Mrs. Minnie Oreen Kills Promi nent Citizen While in Bed. HUSBAND AN ACCOMPLICE The Murder Was One of the Most Cold Blooded and Puzzling Crimes in Ore gon Sharratt Was Prominent Merchant of Lutjens, Ore. Portland. March 10. Mrs. Minnie Green, charged with murdering E. G. Sharratt at Lutjens, Lincoln county, on the night of January 21, 1905, was arrested at 315 Nineteenth street, Port land, at 11 o'clock lust night by Sher iff T. M. Wrord. She la now In the county Jail, and will be taken to New port by Deputy Sheriff D. E. Keasey tomorrow morning Her husband, G. D. Greene, was arrested at Lutjens yesterday afternoon, charged with be ing an accessory. The murder of E. G. Sahrratt was one of the most cold-blooded and pux zllng crimes In the history of Oregon. Sharratt, a prominent merchant of Lutjens, waa found In his bed on the morning of January 22 with a bullet in his brain, a revolver lying on the bed beside htm. He was unconscious. He lived for eight days, suffering un told agony, finally regaining con sciousness, but being unable to speak a word. During the eight days he hov ered between life and death Mrs. Green waited upon him. When he died a coroner's Jury Investigated and re turned a verdict of suicide. A short time after his death an in strument purporting to be his last will waa filed for probate, and under Its terms the bulk of his property went to Mrs. Minnie Green. Although the cir cumstances of his death had been the subject of much speculation, when the will was filed for probate the suspicions of the district attorney were aroused, and he commenced a thorough Investi gation, with the result that both Mr. and Mrs. Greene have been arrested, Mrs. Green charged with the act and Mr. Greene charged with being an ac complice. The theory of the prosecution is that the Greens committed the murder for the purpose of getting the property un der the will and to stop all talk of undue Intimacy between Sharratt and Mrs. Green, of which Green is said to have made complaint. It Is said that Mrs. Green had access to Sharratt's room, und on this the theory is con. structed that she entered the room some time during the night of Janu ary 21. secured Sharatfs revolver and fired, the shot, after which she placed the revolver within reach of his right hand on the bed and returned to her room. This theory, tne prosecution claims, is strengthened by the remarks of Mrs. Green the next morning, and also the conduct of Mrs. Green. After the shot was fired Charratt was not disturbed until after 7 o'clock the next morning, when Mrs. Green went to call him. She says she knocked on the door, but received no response, and then entered the room, and dis covered that Sharratt had shot him self. She Immediately notified Mr. Green, who came to the room, and then notified the authorities. Mr. and Mrs. D. Stanton, who live about 100 feet from the Green residence, In which the murder occurred, were asked to come to the house at once. Stanton, It Is said, made a remark about the suspicious character of the wound. In timating that Sharratt could not have Inflicted It hlmstelf. To this Mrs. Green la said to have replied: Don't say anything about that, or all four of us are liable to be pulled for this Job." Reduction in Rates. Londofi, March 10. The reduction of the bank rate to two and one half per cent, the lowest In seven years Is the subject of Intense satisfaction ex pressed In most of the newspapers tnls morning as showing that the county at last is recovering from the strain Imposed by the South African war. Such an Indication of soundness of the country's finance is expected to have a stimulating effect upon trade, and in- vestments. t y Another Old Settler. Baltimore, Mr., March 10. Mrs. Nancy Kelly, the oldest white woman in Maryland, Is dead at the age of 107 years. Her oldest living son Is 72 and her youngest daughter is 63. For nearly half a century Mrs. K-'tly resided In the houes In which she died. There are ten grand children, and 19 great grandchildren. RESULT OF HAZING. Albert DeRome a Hopeless Cripple as Result. San Francisco, March 10. A hope less cripple from the result of a haz ing administered by the students of the Hopkins Art Institute, Albert De Rome today swore out warrants on a complaint charging Jackson Hatch. A. P. Hunt and C. C. Harrison with bat tery. The men were arrested. Crop Report. Washington. March 10. According? to the crop report Issued by the agri cultural department, shows the per centage of wheat remaining in the hands of farmers to be 20.1 or 111. 000.000 bushels; of corn 38.7 or 954, 000,000 bushels, and oats, 3S.8 per cent or 347,000,000 bushels. WILL HOLD JOBS Competent Men to be Continued in Office. LENGTH OF SERVIGE NO BAR President Roosevelt Today Announced That No Changes Would Be Made ..in Publio Offices of the Country as Long as Men Were Competent. Washington, March 10. President Roosevelt at a cabinet meeting today announced that the policy of the ad ministration, for the present at least, will eb to retain In office the present Incumbents without regard to lengta of service. , This decision, it Is stated, applies to all departments. Cortelyou said that especially would this rule apply and be strictly adhered to in the postofflce department. While this has caused much rejoic ing In many quarters where present public officials holding appointive of fices were beginning to fear they might feel the weight of "Teddy's stick," in other quarters the news is not meeting with the same glad reception. Many disappointed seekers for public berths under the new administration are hid ing their chagrin and awaiting fur ther developments. This action will, It is said, bring to a close, for a time at least, the Impor tuning of many members of both houses who have been diligently lab oring to secure the ( appointment of some of their favored constituents to lucrative places with the government, the success of which meant the re moving of the present occupants of these offices. The senate committee on foreign re lations today reported the San Do mingo treaty with the amendments agreed to. The reports commends its ratification. The treaty will be con sidered Monday and the debate will probably last several days. While the arguments will be varied and of much interest. It Is now believed the treaty will be ratified aa amended. The president today nominated Ed ward Whitson of Washington for dis trict Judge of the eastern district of Washington. This appointment is to fill the new district created In that state.