j rffiMr ? . . . .-a UBLIHIt PULU AttOQIATff D Plt W(Kn COVIRS THE MORNINQ FIILD ON THI LOWE COLUMBIA v. I 4Slli VOLUME LX NO. 187 ' 'irrr V I TROOPS (MQU J V iiiiimnii nniirill McCURDT RESIGNS ' 1 rri i iniv i linn i in uuuui uutfii ID OUT Reslps the Presidency of the New York Life. PROCLAMATION ISSUED Senator Armstrong Advises That Policies Be Not Allowed to Lapse. SAYS LEGISLATION WILL COME former Sutt Senator Admits that Bs Lived at tba Mutual House When ' tt'iltSkiitt AtfaTTn Sesatoe,' and Latar Received Fees (or Varioua Services. New York, Nov. 21. The rclgiutt ion ( President Mi'unly of the Mutual life, wit the most Important develop Incut in tlie Ufa inhorancfi situation to day, Il l undertitd 1 1ir Miliiiii wn (Acred to .latiMa II. rV lc. One nitresting feature of t ! iiitcti- mil. .ft tauluV. tt'tfft HlM Ikf ill r.. -J I .-. TlHik(f Ivitiji -oclnmatkiiiH lv Sena lir A unstrung, chairman of the tminiit 1c, In policy holder, tliunliiig them from allowing their iollcle to Iiin-c lniuii of Uie revelaUon of the Investi gation, uml assured tin-in tli committee would recommend legist ion in their in terest. Form Stata Senator tietage I. Me (VIIiui Untitled UxUy that he lived in the Mutual' house in Albany, while a remit. it and a memltef of Uxi insurance committee, of that hodj, hut it nem tsviniv.l tt him there1 wa anything iniMHT. a lie and A. 0. Fiekla, who conduitcd Vie house, were old friend. Ketaina4 by Mutual. It wns shown that in scleral year, while not. a senator, Mi-Ch-Han wa re- tai I by th Mutuiil a M(XKI, anil with iliil'uulty, Hughe elicited the in formation Unit lie. wa retained to ap lam W.-for Ua ljf it t4w to nrgim iiguin-t. tiie saving Imnk tax and fran chise tn bills. Mct'lfllait hnd just tt d he wa never employed ly the Kiuit aide, wfti-n llnrlni showed him a vouiher of ."WHO, wid ly the mwMy to tlm firm of whieli MtClellun waa a iihmiiImt. MiWiii wa uiuihht to re inemlH'i' it. Joint i'. MiK'nII, mm of IVeMdi-nt Me IVII, ( the New York Life, tentilled that Atfctniey Hamilton had lieen lo Uh at 1'arla and hal It-wived a mea MKn fnttn lYetdilent MiCall, niiet inn him 0 return and te-Ufy. The com inittwi W ld a protracted executive w t4Mi at tha ck of tlve day's hearinjr. at whi. li Uma it wtai dwlded to lnveti jtntion wmild be completed by December 31. MORGAN SUCCEEDS SQUIRES THE AS AMNISTER TO CUBA , Ya-hington, Nov. 2!.-F.dwin V "Morgan, relieved of tl Pf f Amerl ean miiviater at Seoul, Korea, by rea 1.4m of the eatabliehment of the Jap aSancae. protectorate, has been appointed Retires as President of the New York Life. Xrw York, Nov. Kl.l.aH A 1I- ennly t'ulny reiftied a prident of the '.MutiwJ Life. Hi reoigtiatiitn wan mit'ltri hy the board of truleei, and Frank Cromwell, treasurer of the Mu tint) wa ruiiiiixl a tempore y iir- enaMia. Miimly awtlrna the rranoni fiar nwijniBtlon, to bU heallh, whit'h la fail- injf. He mid twt he intended to reniti lt dune, when ha reached Uie age of 70 year, but wan duaded by the irriou diMurbam-e in inuranra affair. Ha had, hiiwaver, overeittimated hU treii(th. .liiMti.e ttufuw I'lillmrn, of the Kit- preme (nrt, truUe for twenty yar. ii Ui reim-d t.xhiy. KILLE BY SANDBAG. San lU-itiurtliuo, Nov. 2!.-'arl Axel Frwl, from (imiurd, X. H., died yeatr- ilay at the county luwpital, after lying iini-onai'liiiia for fmr day. The county phynii'iau utaten emphatically that every Indication Hiint to Fred having Uun andbaed. FORMULATE DEMANDS. jUtuinn, Triiwl'auiwla, Nov, 29.- i TW rrgimeiit .of . tba garriitou here which l tee)-d in deteotaeitt, held a Meeting- yenteeday and formulated de tmuide for tha lmmial of the reerv it of the Khetmm teimenl. OVER N. P. TRACTS Believed Milwauke Will Enter Port land'on North Bank Line. ROUT OJTUNED TO WALLULA But no Farther Probable Course Is Mentioned In Announcement Given Out by High Officiate of the System After Stock-Holders' Meeting. Portland Nov. 21). It U Mated on what reeimt to be pMxl authentic in f.rrrmtlon, tlvit tla Noruhent I'aciflc I will eonntruct a double track down the north bank of 1 lie Columbia, from VYal liiln, Wtiiinj-ton. int4 Portland, and over Hi i line the train of the Cliiciijfo. Milwaukee & SU Paul will run under a tracknu iiriH-mcnt. Thi plnn II Ho in the lu-t link in tlte chain projected by the t hicityo, Milwau kee A St. I'itiil i'tcii-iiin, a annotiuc-.-.I from Xeiv York Vint i-nluv. which I outlined in a (rciieral way, Uie coui'ut of the load ii fiu WO.-1 an WaJlula, 'but mmle no mention of a route further toward tlte count. , GOLD NEAR MAnLtAN STRAIT5 Santiago de Chile, Nov. 2!). There I great excitement In the goldncld bord ering tlie stmlU of Magellan. Many compantc have len formed and there j are great opening in the field and jwaaherkui Tlm Arid promi to be a 'second Klondike. American minister to Cuba, to succerd He-bert 0. Squier, reigned. Relation for a long time, between Stiuie-rs, and Odwn government, have not been aatla- , factory ASTORIA, OREGON Till SR REBELS SUHHDER AFTE DESPERATE BATTLE SHIPS OF MUTINEERS FIRE ON CITY AND FORTS Rebel Squadron Surrenders After One Ship Is Rid dled and Burned, Two More Sunk, and the Third Run Aground. MUTINEERS IN BARRACKS Bloody Conflict Precipitated When Troops Under General NipleuS Open Fire on Rebel Fleet Brest and Bielostok Regiments Attack the Sailors in the Barracks and Force Them to Surrender After Bloody Conflict While De tails Are Lacking, Many Were Killed ai Battle and CitT Suffered Severely St. I'eterohuig, Xov. 29. Scheldt ipol M tlay the acene of a desperate battle U'twcrn the mutinotui nuilor ainl the triMam in the fort. During the battle the town and fort were boniliardil by the gun of the rruier OtchakofT, which lie a burning wreck off the admiralty INtint, it hull riddled and the flaunting retlj efotign' of tixj n-koluton hauled down. Many of the crew of the Otchak olT wm kitl.l or injured. According to one report, the barrack of the mutineer wa carried by lorm after the mutineer of tlte fleet, which i aid to have numliered ten veel, had aurrwaked, and tlie whole jioki tion I now in Uie hand of troop under tlm command of General Xipleuff. The AmociaU-d Pn however-, ia unabkS to guarantee Uie correct ne of the re port. Owing to the interruptoin of the tele graph eervioe, detail of Uie battle are difficult to obtain, but aa the AMociated pre i authoritaUvety informed, the lMlthi waa begun by troop on the. idtore, who oem-d Are o nUte tNchni off, 4dch wa deflanUy displaying a red flag. Tlie Otehakoff immediately ac cepted the cluillcnge., n-plj iug w ith Uith batterictt, (me trained on the town and the other on Fort Alexander and tlie Uitterit on Uie math ahore. Captain ZciUtttl, aide-de-camp to Ad miral Wiremua, chief of the naval gen eral ataff, infonneil Uie Atrmciatetl lYc- that tho latest dixiNitche hIiowhI the (Hciuikoff to be. on Are and badly rid dled, with tlie revolutionary color haul S. J. McLEAN RESIGNS. Upford t'niversity, Xov. 2!'. Simon ,.. J-an, acting head of Uie depart- k 5 6f ev . V . tl cien.. a Valrto fm-eRt - t " " eeonomic of commerce . ta. tion at the University o' ', m . Ilia resignation lia been atvepil . .-esi-dent Jordan. BUBONIC PLAGUE IN JAP A n Seattle. Nov. 2ft. The bulwnic plaP-te U raging in Y'okohama, according ; V the oflioera of Uie stear 'hip4 Dak(., and noseiblv no more veaaela will given ck-an bill of health.' until te scourge ( wiped out. .' . . YESTERDAY'S BASEBALL SCORES. 1st Angele, Nov. 2ft. to Angela, 10 Tacoma, 1. lUkerHfleld, Nov. Oakland, 2. ' 29. Portland. 'US DAY, NOVEMBER 30 THE M FIGHT WITH MACHINE GUNS ed down, but wan unable to give more definite information. According to more detailed report, received from another aource, and purporUng to come from the admiralty department, tlie battle began at 3 o'clock thi morning, when fire wa opened from the fleet of ten ship, to whkh tha northern batteriea. Fort Alexander, and the artillery ported on the ahore and eeveral veel, which re mained kyal, redieL During the naval battle the (tailor on the ahore,. entrenched in the Bar rack, defended their position with ma ordne guns and rifles, against Uie attack ing infantry. After an engagement of two and a half houm, with the Otchak ofT r kid led and on Ares and the cruiser Dnelper and anoUir vessel unk, the en tire iMjuadron surrendered The mutin oti itailor on alioie aurremk-red to the lire! and Bieltttok regiment. Aocording to thi report, the Pantel eimon (formerly the Kniax Potemkine) wa injured lielow k'te water line and a torpedo boat went! ahore on tii. rock. No detail of the caualtie or the damage aufTered by the town is lb tainabht, but owin to tjid rotvAncil smce in which tlie action wa fought, it i Improbable the town ecaped with-vit heavy, damage. Tlie demand of the mutineer cie aaid to include Uie convocation of a constituent aembly, antl a complete realization of Ute Illicit ie promised by the imperial manifesto. RESTRICTIONS REMOVED. Tofio, Nov martial law . 2ft The resclndment f and the restriction plac liberties of the press, ha by Uie privy conncil and ,u ilgated within a few " . .. -'! item, of negotiations b ' and Japan have been arak ed upon the been pasted w,:i-i;jip; days. ( The vital tween China ably settled. GOVERNOR'S SON MARRIED. Natchei, Mis., Nov. 29. Dr. Charles Chamberlain, son of Governor Cham berlain of Oregon, and Mi Deborah Boatner, daughter of Judge S. Boatner, were married here tonight. FARMER BURNS WINS. De Moines, Nov. 29. Farmer Burns tonight defeated Albert Carlson, of Mineapolis, in a catt-h a catch-can wrestling match, winning the but two falls. . 1905 mTTTn?T 111 TOO MANY STORIES J. J. Hill Declares Trip to Moon as Prob able as Purchase of "Katy." Xew York, Xov. 2!). Jame .1. Hill took onmdon before lie left for the Went yenterday fc deny with mor. t,u- pha that hie recent trip to F.urope wa for the purpnwe of geUine; furula to buy the MitHouri Kajia t Texas rail way aa a jpilf outlet to the Burlington railroad. Mr. Hill nakl tliat a trip to the moon wa no more improbable. "Tliey tell m many ittwrie about my buying railroad that t lie re i no ue defiying them," he naid. Mr. Hill aid that the rfK.rt that President Eliot of the Xortlwrn Paiifi. it to reeign to teyme preei.Jent of tile Chu-ago Terminal railroad and is to be aucmedfd by Mr. Hill' eon. J. X. Hill, U a "Stock broke vrv.n RUSSIAN PRISONERS TO HAWAII. Yh-lfVia, Xov. 211. According to a di-putch received by the burner Tyo Maru, agent of the Hawaiian planters are endeavoring to Induce numbers of KtiAMitn primmer in Jafan to emigrate to Hawaii, offering them work on the sugar plantation.-'. BODY FOUND IN RIVER. Xew Yortc. Xov. 2fl. Tlie- body of John X'. TUdale, a wealtfty mining op erator, wlto diapeared from a hoial a, Seville November 5, wa found today in Harlem River. SENATOR IS TOO GAY Printed Cartoons, and Editorials Reflecting on Supreme Court. FINED A THOUSAND DOLLARS Colorado Supremo Court Holds Senator Patterson ia Contempt, But Latter Declares Bo Will Go to Jail Rather than Pay the Fine. Denver, Nov. 29. The Supreme Court today held United States Senator Pat terson In contempt of court for print ing cartoons and editorial in hi two neMpapcra and fined him $1000, di recting that he be committed to jail until the fine wa paid. Subsequently Uie court ordered a stay of proceeding, pending an appeal to the United State Superne Court. At the hearing today, Patterson declared emphatically he would go to jail rather than pay the fine. Hi attorneys also informed the court Uiat Patemon would exercise hi constitutional right aa a United State Senator, to claim exemp tion from arrest, while Congress was in seesion, and thereby set aide, the judg ment of the court in order to be pres ent when Congres convened. After further dixcu;ion Uie Senator old Uie court if the stay waa granted, ia would hasten an appeal to the Jnited State Scpremo Court, and if that body refused to take cognisance of hie cae, he would pay the fine. WHEELER SCORES COMMITTEE ON RULES OF FOOTBALL Berkeley, Nov. 29. President Wheel- er, of the University of California to - 'day delivered a scorching arraignment 'of the national football authorities, lie (stated that Walter Camp waa the onlv PRICE FIVE CENTS JDiMl ELEVEN LIVES ARE LOST Victims of Terrible Storm on Great Lakes.' 1 EIGHT SHIPS WRECKED A Dozen Are Missing and Total Loss Will Aggregete Two Millions. Fin of the Survivors of the Crew of the Ill-Fated Mataafa Are Taken from Wrecked Vessel by lifeaavere Nearly Dead from Cold and Exposure I ., Chicago,' XovT"297-Tne" storm on the Upper Lake, which brought death to eleven and wrought untold havoc among the sailing craft, ha almost sub sided tonight ami the work of rescue and relief is being carried on wifh ut most vigor. Up to midnight, eight Tea eels, representing a total of $813,000, were reported total WTecks, and stilt about a dosen are missing. It is esti mated the total loa to shipping will aggregate over $2,000,000. SIX ARE RESCUED Survivors of Mataafa's Crew Sescned With Difficulty. Duluth, Nov. 29. The net reeulU of Uie great atorm x far a known, are Uie total wreck of the steamers Ma taafa, Crescent City, Edinburgh, and LaFayette. The sinking of the Ellwood and Uie stranding of Uie barge Manila, and two barge are mhwing Tha "trainer Braneford escaped with punc ture in her forward compartment and succeeded in reaching Duluth. A fir.yud off ftei LaFayette waa drow ned and . the second assistant en gineer of the Edenburg waa lost. Nine men foundered on the Mataafa. Early today when the lifesaving crew resumed their effort to reach the Ma taafa, tlie form of a man waa seen standing at the door of tlie captain's cabin. A megaphone waa secured, and in response to repeated calls, the man appeared on the deck and replied, "All alive fonvmrd, can you get us ashore!" This spurred the lifesavers, and with great ditBculty, through a sea so rough the waves were rolling over tlie wreck and cloud of spray that flew mat high, the lifeboat, tossed like a chip, readied the side of tlie wreck and a rope was thrown to eager hands on board. Ona at a Time. Then Uie work of lowering Uie half frozen men into Vie boat began. There was no confusion or useless hurry. Each man, a hi name was called, stepped from behind the poor shelter of the CaUen3 ealia and committed himself (Continued on Pago Eight.) member of the so-called rules commit, , tee, of any use in the making over of , the game so that brutality would be f eliminated. lie said the other member) of the committee were inefficient