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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (March 4, 1905)
. - . . 4 . . . ! " 'v' - "' . " : efW pop evening: v V .J -111 .. Th Circulation Vee 'V r !Th Weather. Of The Journal & 101 weiiner. v i 7 'onlgkt-and Sunday. om ana eunaay, mr; , var w i Yesterday was rrrr-rrn A; v, ; di winas, mostly - northerly, vbt;''in'.)rNd.,;aii 1 S"S ( ft. I'r) litt U ..t'A. 51 ' ; 1 : 1 ' . n ; ? ::'.; mm ri--,V.--".'!- W-- "W. WAV - 7 1 . WV 'Qsll f:- YOUNG EST ' CHIEF Imposing Ceremonies Accompany v', President-Roosevelt ? Senators' Sworn Just Previously- Crowd Immense.!! 4 s .., (jtoui epMUl STfc.) ' , Washington, D. X, Mar.-4. Thodor Rooaavelt waa todar traniformd 'from . : praaldant toy chance Into praaldent by. ... choice; from president through an aaJ ' aaaaln'a bullet' Into president through ' Ute ballots of the people. , . V.- Under the shadow of the gray-domed capltoU gaalng Into the. placid marble . features of Greenough's ecatue of the ' first president, the fith president of . the United Btates. swore faithfully to execute the laws and to Breearve pro , teot and defend the constitution..- .' When-ht entered the White House the youngesi president In his country's history, besides the vast responslblll- ' ties of his office,-he received as a herl . Ufi McKlnleys dearest arsbltlon to be-',- come more and more with the years the president of all the .. people. Today ! there were represented In the throngs that had Journyed hrther to'greet Pres . Went , Koosevelt men from ' the north. south, east and west, and from distant I Islands tot the seas; from the Phlllp r pines, from Porto Rloo, front Hawaii from every land where floats the em blem of the repuljllc .y,,W. Kostt ad Boath Vresemt. ; ' sIn the great parade there rode gov ' ernors of states, both-north and south. FUlplnes who had. fought under th "flag of Agutnaldo today carried the arms of Uncle Ham and stepped proudly , beneath the stars and stripes. Blan keted Indiana from the virile vising vied '' with sllk-hated gentry from the effete veam in. sounaing-tne - praises: or tnis ' cowboy.iuthor-soldler-statesman. ; ' The president's old rancher . friends, .- with lariat and chaps rejoe and wiry bron - choa, mads strange contrast to the stlff . backed, pouter-chested young mu from the national military schools. 1 ' . '-'r ,., - :;',y :"5': V--vV'5.';':---'? . C! H IE F r JUSTI C FU LCrt Ji DM , the! Taking 'of,!th I Oath' by Vice-President Fairbanks and Thirty "-'it :t f -n- i : . ,Rough . Rider , from Ban . Juan hill, volunteers from Santiago, jacklea from llanUa bay shared' the plaudits ot, the dvultltude . wUh modest, every -day sol diers, for-whom the title regular ls dis tinction AUtte enough. Political clubs from east and west, militiamen from north 'and south, blue-clsd, veterans of the slxttes,,Yieroes of the Spanish-American war, 'minera from Pennsylvania, the entire - legislature of thai state of Tennessee, ' the , ' president's neighbors from Oyster bay e,ll contributed to the national charaoter of' the splendid pa geant," Who - shall soy that for today at least Theodore'1 Roosevelt - was ; not president of all the people? ' ;r .! i, V1 ,. , Bongb Bide soort.'- i s The colonel of the Rough Riders Wat written' of' his crowded hour, insba. Today he showed his former comrades a crowded hour In' Washington., They were waiting for him when he emerged fronv' the White -lloo.se at. 10 a. m-80 picked men - usder Governor. '' Bredle. With the crack squadron A of the Fisst cavalry. United " States' army, they formed his escort te-the eapltel, As they swtmg around the treasury building Into Pennsylvania avenue a division of the O. a: R.. with Oeneral O. O. Howard and staff In the lead, which had been standing at salute, wheeled Into the col umn, while the cavalrymen checked their pace to accommodate the slower foot steps of the sged veterans. ;-. i A mighty wave of cheers swf pt ajong the avenue as the president's csrriage cam In sight Throughout, the whole; route the -president, with hat In hand, kept bowing In acknowledgment of the greetings. .On his arrival at the capital -(CoBttmied-da Pager Tareej"' 1 1 EXECUTIVE' IN portland'oregon.4' Saturday evekino.'' march' IN ISTERI fr Q :!f H E '0 ATH Tp PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT. BELOW police find mmi IN POISON MYSTERY A 4 -J. Strychnine In Mineral r Water Identical, With That Used ; -rrr ' In: Stanford Barn, t " r .i t -h )fjooraal SpetUl errlee.Y T ; Ban i Francisco. March" t. Beyond the departure -for ' Honolulu- today - of - De tective Harry Reynolds of , the . city fdrce, 'Capt', James CalJuodan, bead ef a prlVktd detective agency employed' by the representatives of the Stanford es tate, David Burr Jordan, president of Stanford university and Timothy Hop kins, one of the trustees of the university, themttmlng developed nothing new la the great . Stanford poisoning mystery. Rumors followed by prompt denials are not' lacking,, but tangible facts are absent. The first i, rumor- denied wss the- alleged, finding of. a. bottle of strychnine at the Stanford munition.. The police declare that' In Friday's search only a few simple medicines were found. - 'Another rumor wss to the effect that It ' was authoritatively announced that strychnine had . been found In Mrs. Stanford's stomach; Neither tli police, Mrs. Stanford) brother-nor. the coun sel for the Stanford . estate have srfy such Information, and sll deny tbat re port on the work thus far accomplished by analytical chemists hss been .given out either at Honolulu or cabled te San Francisco. - : r - .-: -'.-,,, - . Miss ' Bemefs admissions thst she purchased the bottle of bicarbonate of soda, and that the purchase was. made after the first poisoning snd three days before the time she says It waa packed away, to remain untouched until Mrs. Stanford arrived In Honolulu, Is con sidered fatal to her side of .the cone. In fsrt Miss Werner's many contradic tory Statements , and bed memory have not helped to dispel the tmpYenslon' thst shs is. attempting to shlrld the guilty person. j . . - The police department . Is "still rest-M .(Continued on Page Three.)' - t' GE0T3GE 3XCORTBTLY0U. PO0T GPNEEAL. ;; HILL FINDS DIRECT " WAY TO PORTLAND ' ' J '- ", ' ' -n -.'. f ''..'' - . - . v .,,-'' -,m f,.. Belief General That He Is Pur ( Chaser of . Columbia A. , " Northern Railroad.- . , J, . J...H(U's long-nurtured purpose of securing entrance Into Portland for the Great Northern .railroad Is about to bo accomplished. It Is believed he Is the purchaser of a controlling Interest In the Columbia A Northern railroad, from Lisle to Ooldendale, and its subsidiary boat line known aa the Regulator, and that he will extend the road from Oold endale through the rfh valleys of the Taklma and Columbia' rivers to a Junc tion with the Great Northern main line at Wllsow-Creek, Wash..'.- ... '" - -Terms have been agreed on between Henry P. Scott ft Co., bankers, of Wil mington, DeL, end the principal stock holder In , the Columbia River : ft Northern, for the taking Over of the property by a, syndicate of Philadelphia and Baltimore) capitalists, who are sup posed to represent Mr. Hill. Mr. Scott snd his party are now in lower Call- fornla. and will come to Portland within ten days, on receipt of advices from their attorneys,-Teal ft Minor, who are making, an examination . of titles and records relating to the property In volved. The Portland stockholders who Titfve agreed to dispose ef their holdings are Ladd ft Til ton, T. B. Wilcox, W, B. Aver. Rufus Mallory. A. L. Mills, C. V. Swlgert,' H.-C. Campbell, W. P. Haw ley, E. B. Pipe. William McMaater, George W. Simons, M. W. Smith, U. A. Lewis, W. K. Robertson, E. KMallory and Charles . Coggeswell. rrloi About j The price Is slightly under H.OOO.OPo, snd Is understood to -represent a pur these of 'about 10 per cent of thebnnki ' (Continued "on race Tbr.) 4, 1905 sixteen pages. ; ARE SHOWN THE MEMBERS ATTORNEY CENE5L BY COURT : OPINION Circuit Judges En Banc Declare , 1 Direct Primary.Nominations . ' - Law Applies This Year. . :1 V . ..Presiding Judge George, by his three associate circuit court Judges, Fraser, Clsland and Bears. -concurring, today de clared that the direct primary nomina tions law applies to the 105 Portland city election. By this decision, ". the court compels Immediate abolition of the Ume-honored systsm of party nomi nating conventions, and glvee Into the hands of the members of political par ties coming under the provisions of the law the exclusive power to name candi dates who shall stand for election to office by those parties; deprives person not so nominated from using the name of a political party In running as Inde pendent candidates; makes It unlawful for any member of one party to vote In primary elections for tbe nomination or candidates of snother party, -and makes It unlawful for an elector to offer to vote ln a primary nominating elec tion .'Unless he ehall have bflen regis tered es to his party affiliation. -' i It Is- conceded that, by this decision, political machines lose much yor their potency, ' It being even required" that members of! the county central commit tees hereafter most be elected In the direct" fcrimsry nomination election, and cannot be"seleoted by the bossb Who rule the parties. V i ; ,. w ' ApoUea 'to AIL- Under the application of the law elec tors must go to the county clerk be tween March Is and April IS. this year, snd register their party altlliatlona,-If they wish to vote -las' nominating can didate of their parties, this provision applying to members of Republican and Democratic parties, ss well as to tnds pendents. - who do .not belons; -to: ny" party or who belong to parties that did not, cast ,Jer cent oft the vote cast ' (Continued ' oa rage Eleven). OF THE PRESIDENT'S CABINET.' JAPS-GUI0FF RUSSIAN ) l.Vu,.:...-. Kurokl Hurls Two Hundred and ' the Wing Opposing-Him and Kuropitkin's Main Force, " Preventing Retreat to Hfbin Great Slaughter.' ? ' (Joum.1 Sperlal BerTiee.) i f London; March .-A' Bf.' Petersburg dispatch states that Kuropatkln reports that ' 250,000 Japanese " have ' broken through the left. wing of his army, cut ting It off from' his-main force. ;' . Kuropatkln stales ' that his losses were 10,000 killed, and the Japanese losses 40.000 killed." - He also -reports that the Russians have been compelled to evacuate Jachtoolln., and that sis desperate attempts made by the iJupa aeae to storm the Russntn center were repulsed with great loss. , : ' I !; ' ' From the - above - It le evident that Kurokl'a flank movement has been en tirety successful,, and that his whole division lies between 1he left wing of the Rusalan .army ami the renter, ef fectunlly Interfering with the retreat to Harbin. ... If this dlspatch'.ls confirmed the Rus sians face the grealest disaster of the wsr, with one third of their-army 'sur rounded and cut off from the. main body, with their right- In retreat and with desperate fighting In the centerv which Is apparently the only place where the Russlsns have been . enabled to hol-l their own. It appears that Kurnpatkln is In Imminent; danger of being crushed or compelled to surrender. .- .... ' The Japanese arnvtes-fighting on thei right,' left and center are making steady gains. The Japanese have defeated the Russians at Sin Mln Tin and Genera! Oku has raptured nine miles of the Rus sian positions on the right bunk of the Hun-river. ' The buttle has continued with unin terrupted fury along the' whole' front throughout the entire-day. Havy gun art be lug used baoimcr... j i PRICE FIVE CENTS. Fifty Thousand Men Between 3!? (' '- V.' : .' ' l '- -j .' ' clfully. at the Russian positions.' The retirement of " th "RvJssHrts has' only' come about after .the fiercest fighting and was necessitated by successful flank movement of KurokL :. The center could probably hold their position against tho Japanese Indefinitely, but Kurokl'e suc cess -has forced the present retreat to-. ward Tie Pass. ' " ' ', ' 1 - The first Russian station east of the Liao river has been occupied by the Japanese and the Mukden trail la closed. Reports from ; Mukden stkte thst tho cannonading . "is drawing " rlQser- aal . everything In the' rty la In. confusion, i Thousands of wounded are streaming through Mukden - northward. ' Kvery means of transportation Is being ued by. tbe people,, who are fleeing from the Invading armies. ; .The present battle--haa rased con (In d ously sine February !3.when the fight began, with) a heavy artillery at tar k by the Japanese ob "the Russians st La fa tal on the Russian Iff t. Interest, how -ever, quickly deserted Utpatai and eon- centrated Itself en Telnkhetchln, a point SO miles southeast of Mukden. . Tbe Russlsn left ended 10 mlle west of this place. Its flank guards keeping sharp watch of Knrokl to see that he did not stretch hla for?es out beyond the Russian wing with a view to en veloping. It. "Buddently to Ih.lr smase mont the Japanese appeared at Talr1--hetchin snd sfter dexprrale t crtmi-litMl tt retreat of tha 'is.. ,, Following up his advantage Ik.tr I tacked the fortifications sr.. pux and seised the pa- t- i he hua gradually for. f I the Kuaalaa fUnlt. r reach the rallro-t r ueal to lUi I h j ,s ...-