NEWBERG COAL PIBR8 BURN. GRAPHIC Lackawaaaa Loses Five MllHoas In at New York. B. N. WOODWARD. NEWBERG................. FALL OF KINCHOU OREGON EVENTS OF THE DAY of of tfco Past Week, to Provo Attack on Port Arthoi is expected to begin about Jane 20. Clashes between Japanese and Rus­ sian skirmishing parties continue. General Kuroki is harassing Kuro- patkin so as to give Oku a clear road to Port Arthur. * Mayor McLean, of Baltimore has committed suicidg. No cause for the act is known. A bridge over the Arkansas river at Salida, Colo., collapsed and four people were drowned. The Russians have abandoned Cheng K o Chen Pan, Huang Shan and Liu Shu Tun, moving in closer to Port Arthur. Fire in Cleveland, Ohio, destroyed $100,000 worth of property. The prin­ cipal loss w ill'b e that of the St. Clair street school. The czar is very much displeased with both Kuropatkin and Alexieff and it is said he would relieve them were it not that he fears the effect of public opinion. I t is said an agreement has been drafted whereby Germany promise* armed support to Russia if necessary to prevent England and the United States from attempting to submit the Far Eastern question to an interna­ tional congress. Senator Quay, of Pennsylvania, is dead. The Chinese are assisting the Japan- in every way poseible. The Presbyterian general assembly w ill ask tbe senate to oust Smoot. The Baltic fleet cannot be in shape to sail for the Far East before October at the earliest. New York, June 1.— Seven freight and coal piers of the Delaware, Lacka­ wanna Western railroad in Jersey City were destroyed today by a fire that started on the barge Allen C. Churchill, which lay alongside pier 12, on which a lot of barrels cf oil were stored. The loss is estimated at $1,- 000,000. The flames spread rapidly. Pier 12 was 800 feet long and was soon ablaze its entire length, and the fire­ men who were trying to fight the fire from the shore were able to accomplish but little. The flames swept across to pier 11 and beyond, being finally checked at pier 6, which is a new coal trestle, steel-framed and iron-clad. Here the firemen and fireboats made a despeiate stand and stayed the advance of the fire until tbe burning piers crumbled and'fell into the water. Although there was little wind, sparks fell a ll along the water-front for nearly a mile, endangering the Lacka­ wanna station and even the Hamburg- American and Bremen line piers, where the firemen were kept busy playing streams of water upon tbe blaze and over the ships at their docks. A number of canal boats and several tugs were burned, the loss of small boats being variously estimated at from 30 to 200. The number of freight cars is not known, but the loss on this class of rolling stock w ill be heavy. Tbe Lackawanna road moved its passenger coaches out to the Meadows, and one train of freight cars was moved out and saved.* Piers 11 and 12 were full of general merchandise; piers 7, 8, 9 and 10 were used for coal and pier 6 was a grain­ loading pier. No person was seriously injured. Vice-President Loomis, of the Lacka­ wanna, placed the total loss by the fire at $6,000,000, based on the Original cost of the piers burned, on the freight stored on them and to some extent the loss of bnsiness which must necessarily ensue. I t also includes the burning of the canal boats and barges thickly moored between some of the piers The Lackawanna company carries its own insurance. A Death for Wlre-Cnttlng. The Japanese loss in the battle of Seoul, June 1.— M. Hayashi, Japan­ Kinchou is placed at 12,000 and the ese minister to Corea, has notified the Russians are thought to have suffered foreign office that the Japanese m ilitary a heavier loss. authorities are constantly complaining The Presbyterian general assembly that telegraphic communication with has decided for union with the Cumber­ General San is frequently interrupted. land Presbyterian church by almost a The Japanese m ilitary authorities sus­ unanimous vote. Tbe united church pect that the country people are cut­ ting the lines at various unfrequented w ill have a membership of 1,600,000. places. M. Hayashi states that the The Japanese are reported to have Japanese emperor has issued a procla­ followed the Russians and compelled mation inflicting tbe death penalty on them to abandon Nan Quan Ling and all persons caught destroying telegraph driven them from 8anchilipu, retreat­ lines, and asks that the Corean govern­ ing toward Port Arthur. The Japanese ment take similar action. have captured 60 cannon. conference The Japanese have captured the Rus­ sian stronghold of Kincou. Ten Pennsylvania miners were suffo­ cated by fumes of gas in a tunnel. Lee M. Travis, a young Eugene attor­ ney, has been arrested on a charge of pension frauds. An Auburn, California, bank has oeen robbed by a disguised man during business hours. Riots, in which the Jews are being severely maltreated, are of daily occur­ rence in Russia. £1. nnttary Bxperta Deemed the Position Impregnable—Advance on Felt Arth­ ur Is Expected to Fellow at Once— Russians Finally Bested la a tland- to-tlaad Conflict. Tokio, May 30.— After two days of desperate fighting, the investment of Kinchou has beoome a fact. The pre­ paratory engagements of Sunday, Mon­ day and Tuesday led to the final effort i Wednesday to take the heights of Kinchou, including the fortreee known i the castle. An artillery engage­ ment, beginning at dawn on Wednes­ day morning, lasted five honrs, after which period General Oku, command­ ing all the army divisions, sent Lieu­ tenant General, .Baton Kawamura, of the Tenth, Twenty ninth, Thirty-ninth and Fortieth regiments, to storm the heights. This was the beginning of the great battle, which ended at 7 o’clock on Thursday night, when the Japanese infantry, in a hand-to-hand conflict, drove the Russian defenders from the Nan Shan hill, said by m ili­ tary authorities to be practically im­ pregnable. From this h ill, Dalny is absolutely at the mercy of the Japan­ ese from the west, as are the hills lead­ ing directly to the Port Arthur fortifi­ cations. W hile General Oku, through A d ­ miral Togo, ¿telegraphs that the Japan­ ese loss was heavy in the two days fighting, Tokio is wild with joy, and the streets are filled with men, women and children, marching in line be­ hind bands, and all carrying lanterns. The great triumph north of Port A r­ thur lias confirmed tbe always strong belief with the Japanese that their soldiers are more than a match for the Muscovite enemy. As all the dis­ patches show that the Russians fought with desperate valor, there is no doubt also that their losses were heavy. FBW BOOKED POR NOM a Laboring Mea flavo Had Ui a pleasant Bx- la tho North. Seattle May SO.—A year ago 2,000 steerage tickets had been sqld by this tim e on the Nome liners. Up to the present time 600 fcav* been booked on the first boats ou( of this port for the North. From these figures operators are drawing the conclusion that there w ill be a shortage of common laborers ;n Nome daring the coming season. In view of the fact that the Council City Solomon railroad w ill nse about 1,- 200 men during the season there is ap­ parently some basis for the contention that more men should be taken North. Laboring men are not apt to flock to­ ward Nome this year, for those who went North last year had a hard seas­ on. Most of them loafed abont Nome without work, and the season Was so short that those who found plenty of employment did not make much. W hile there is promise of a long season and mors work than nsual, laboring men regard the situation as one that only benefits the steamship companies. A IN FIRST DBORBB. Normaa W illiam Found Oallty of Mur- M i l Mil wife. The Dalles, May 28.— Norman W il­ liams, forger, bigamist, nxuricide and murderer of women, sits in the shadow of the gallows now. Last night at 8 o’clock the clerk read from a typewrit­ ten piece of paper the fateful words: " W e , the jury, find the defendant, Norman Williams, guilty of murder in the first degree." Out of Norman W illiam s’ month came the evidence which is to hang him. " A self convicted murderer,” Deputy District Attorney Wilson called him, and tfuly it was the amaz­ ing contradictions of W illiam s’ stories as to when he last saw the murdered Nesbitt women that fastened first the suspicion and then the certainty of guilt upon him. Japan Wants Reply Soon. London, Jane 1.— The Standard’s Tientsin correspondent telegraphs that Uchida, the Japaneee minister at Pe­ kin, has demanded an immediate reply to the inquiry previously sent to the Wai-Wa-Pu as to whether China is prepared to hold and administer the territory the Japanese have conquered, adding that otherwise Japan must ap­ peal to other powers to undertake the responsibility at the expense of China. Minister Uchida has notified the Chi­ nese government at Pekin that Port Arthur w ill soon be captnred. Russia May Favor tba Jaws. 8t. Petersburg, May 30.— Interior Minister Von Plehwe has proposed to the council of the empire an important project for the repeal of the la a under which Jews aie forbidden to reside within 32 miles of the frontier. On account ot the prevalence of amuggling some years ago, the Jewish pale was drawn back from the border. The new departure is considered one of the important steps in the execution of Emperor Nicholas' ukase, issued in the early part of 1903, promising freedom of conscience to bés subjects. Paid Dsarly lor klncboa Vic­ tory-2,000 Russians Killed. . Tokio, May $1.— The Japanese casu­ alties at Nan 8haa are now estimated at 3,600. Thu number of Russian guns captured exceed 70. W hile Japan paid heavily for her victory she scored a sweeping and val­ uable viotroy over the Russians, in cap­ turing 67 guns, clearing the way to Port Arthur and inflicting losses on the Russians, which, in the end, are ex­ pected to total 2,000 men. I t is doubtful if the Russians w ill stand again north of Port Arthur. They retired from the field beaten, and they failed to rally at Nan Qnan Ling, where it was anticipated a second stand would be made. ' Tbe desperate onslaughts of tbe Jap­ anese on the heights of Nan Shan were telling, for (he Russians left 300 dead in the trenches there. A complete search of the field is expected to show a greater number of dead. Nan Quan Ling was occupied yester­ day morning by a force of infantry, ar­ tillery and engineers under the com­ mand of General Nakamura. The main Japaneee force spent Friday night billeted in the villages • around Nan Shan. The soldiers were greatly fa­ tigued as a result of the constant fight ing, but they entered with much spirit upon the new operations. A force fo Russians held San Chi L i Pu station, which is northwest of Dal­ ny, bnt the Japanese drove them out. The Russians abandoned and burned the station and retreated in the direc- tion of Port Arthur. " The estimates of the Russians engag­ ed in the defense of Kinchou, Nan Shan h ill and the sonth shore of Talienwan bay vary, bnt it ia evident that the Russians drew for men from the forces at Port Arthur and offered all the resist­ ance possible. It is understood here that Lieutenant General Stoessel, com­ mander of the m ilitary forces at Port Arthur, was in personal command of the recent operations. MASKING RBAL PORCB. 9 Russians Now m Object ot Mo of Japanese Troops. St. Petersburg, May 31.— The news contained in the following dispatch to the emperor from General Kuropatkin, is all that was officially given out to­ night : "O n May 25 a Japaneee force con­ sisting of a battalion of infantry and a squadron of cavalry advanced on the main road to Liao Yang, but was soon compelled to retire toward Tkhonine- nez. " A second Japanese detachment, con­ sisting of a battalion of infantry, at the village of Dapu, in the A i valley, fired heavily on our Coeaacka from 10 in the morning until 4 in the afternoon, but the Japanese infantry failed in an at­ tempt to tarn the Coaeacka’ right flank and intercept their retreat.” ' W h ile the dispatch ia brief and bald, it ia considered extremely significant. The fact that the Japanese com­ menced to advance along tbe main Liao Yang road immediately they had forced the neck of the Liao Tung peninsula and cat off Major General Fock from any co-operation with the Russians in the north shows a thorough understand­ ing between the Japanese commanders. The authorities here believe the ad­ vance from Feng Wang Cheng has only been suspended, pending the elimina­ tion of Fock’ s force, and they expect that the advance upou Liao Yang w ill now be pushed in earnest. I t is evident that the continual shift­ ing of and skirmishing by the advanced posts of the Japanese around Feng Wang Cheng have been merely success- ful in masking the real force, consist­ ing of the third army, which is mov­ ing north from Taknshsn. It is ex­ pected that this force w ill be hurled upon Liao Yang, while the Southern Japanese force is busy wtih Port Ar­ thur. The fact that there is almost a com­ plete suspension of press messages from Russian correspondents at the front is taken to indicate that import­ ant moveents are pending. Ruaaiana Moat Seek Fort. Russians Not Using Floating Mines. St. Petersburg, May 31.— There is no attempt here to disguise the fact that the successful forcing of the neck of Kwan Tung peninsula proper puts a practical end to resistance to the enemy until be reaches the actual fortifications arpund Port Arthur. Although there are many strong positions in the more than 25 miles before the perimeter of the fortress is reached, tbe authorities admit that the Ruaaiana can offer little resistance, and mast now retire within tbe fortress and prepare for the final struggle. St. Petersburg. May 80.— A high au­ thority at the admiralty said to the correspondent of the Associated Press today:' " I t is false to assert that the Russians use floating mines. They are not known in the Russian naval service. The Japaneee need them con­ stantly off Port Arthur.” Washington, May 31. — Minister Griscoin cables to the state department from Tokio under today’s date that tbe Japanese government declares tbe Liao Tong peninsula from Pitsewo to Pul- ientan to be in a state of blockade. Two Dtvlatom of Float. Paris, June 1.— The Echo de Paris’ St. Petersburg correspondent learn« that the Baltic fleet w ill leave in two detachments. The first, consisting of four battleships, is due to ¿tart June 24. The battleship Oris Will be re­ Inspectors recommend that Superin­ floated. The dynamos, the only part tendent Pottor, of tbe Chemawa Indian school, be retained, but repremanded of her machinery seriously damaged, w ill be changed. for lax methods. r< Viceroy Alexieff insists that Kuro­ patkin fight instead of retreating to Harbin. The latter claims he has not men enough. JAPANESE COMPEL RUSSIANS TO RE­ TREAT TOWARD PORT ARTHUR. CAVALRY W ILL BB 5BNT. Major Langfitt has asked that Oregon Marines Could Accomplish Little la a ^ Rough Country. be allowed $60,000 out of the emergen­ cy river and harbor appropriation. Washington, June 1.— High officials of the administration are considering Black smallpox, brought from the the expediency of making war on the Orient, has stirred the people of V ic­ Moroccan bandits if France declines to toria, B. C. A passenger from one of land troops and assume responsibility the liners died of the disease soon after for the bandits' punishment. These reaching shore. Officials have discussed the best method The new explosive used by Japan is of procedure and have reached the con­ a surprise to all m ilitary experts. I t clusion that nothing but cavalry ac seems the strongest known, piercing the customed to campaigning in a moun­ heaviest armor plate easily. Its menu tainous country would be of service. facture is a profound secret. I t w s r at first suggested that several hundred marines should be landed at Four men entered a Chicago store Tangier and mounted. They would be ene block from the Central police sta­ sent in pursuit of the kidnappers of Ion tion and compelled the six clerks and 14 customers to stand back while they M. Perdicaiis and his stepson. This robbed the cash register. They secured was considered inadvisable, as the marines would not be experienced in $386. that kind of warfare. I f an expedition Senator Quay's condition is now crit- is sent it w ill comprise trained cavalry' isal. men from the United States. The president and general staff think The Good Roads convention in 1006 this government should send an armed w ill be held in Portland. expedition after the brigands. Secre­ Premier Combes, of France, says tary Hay and other administration papacy must not meddie in internal officials discourage the idea and • think affairs. France should take the necessary steps. The secretary of the interior has de­ There has been no intimation, however, cided that Oregon has no title to K la ­ that France w ill do this, but M r. Hay feels sure that she w ill take action be­ math reservation swamp lands. fore Great Britain or tbe United States The news of tbe fa ll of Kinchou was sends an armed force into the sultan’ s first published in Russia while the peo­ country. ple were celebrating the coronation of the caar. The Methodist general has adjourned. — LOST 3,500 MEN. Declared a State of Blockade. YAZOO IS IN ASHES ENTIRE BUSINESS SECTION OF MIS­ SISSIPPI CITY LAID W ASTE Raged Proa Early noralag UatU Night, Water Supply Belag qaate—Loss la Bathaated at 31,000,000 to $2,000,000—Over Two Handrod Buildings Jackson, Mias., May 27.— Fire in Yazoo City today destroyed every busi­ ness house of any Importance, together with a large nnmber of private resi­ dences, the principal hotel and the pas­ senger station. The fire started at 8:30 this morn­ ing, and burned until 5 o ’clock this af­ ternoon, destroying 200 buildings. The burned distirct is three blocks wide and 12 blocks long. The estimates of the loss are between $1,600,000 and $2,000,000. The water supply was inadequate and efforts to stay ths flames were fu­ tile. A citizen named Chambliah wae killed by falling walls and Mayor Holmes was severely hart, his con­ dition tonight being reported as pre­ carious. In the afternoon the fire spread to Latonia, a residence district, where it destroyed some of the finest homes. The Yazoo county courthouse and the Ricks memorial library escaped des­ truction, and the vaults of the banks and the poet office protected their treas­ ures. Yazoo C ity is 40 miles distant from Jackson, and has 6,000 inhabitants. Some Put Less at $3,000,000. Jackson, Miss, May 27.— I t is im ­ possible tonight to place an accurate es­ timate upon the loss entailed by tb e fire, but it is thought that the total w ill be between$2,000.000 and $2,600.- 000. Some estimates are even as high as $3,000,000. The total insurance ie between $800,000 and $1,000,000. W ILL EXPLORE LAKE COUNTY. Surveyors are to L e a n lor Irrlgatloa. Possibilities Washington, May 27.— At the re­ quest of Senator M itchell, a reconnais - ance party w ill proceed late in June to make an investigation of the central part of Lake county, Oregon, with a view to ascertaining whether there is a leasable location for the construction of a large irrigation work by the gov­ ernment. Senator M itchell describee this district as having a fine climate, where all cereals, fruits and vegetables that are cnitivated in any part of Ore­ gon grow abundantly, and where there is a large body of fine agricultural land. The Cheqnican river, which flow » through this section, is reported to fnrnish an ample supply of water for reclamation of nearly, if not quite a ll, these lands. It has been reported to 8enator M itchell that reservoir sites can be secured to hold flood waters a t different points along ths stream. Aa Lake County has contributed largely to the arid land fund, citizens of that dis­ trict are exceedingly anxious that thia project aball receive early considera­ tion. FINDS NO FRAUD. Jury la tbe Poatofftca Case Clears Ty- aer and Barrett. Washington, May 27.— W ithin 22 minutes of tbe retirement of the jnry in tbe case of James N. Tyner and Harrison J. Barrett, tried on chargee of conspiracy in connection with their duties as law officers of the Postoffice Department, a verdict of not guilty was returned. The throng which filled the courtroom throughout the argu­ ments to the jury hardly had time to leave the building before the jury wae back and the foreman announced that a verdict had been reached. General Tyner appeared greatly ex­ cited as he attempted to face the jnry, and when the verdict was returned, he broke down completely. Several o f tbe jurors wept with him, and all o f them shook bands with him. The Tyner Barrett case was began on Msy 2 and has been before the conrt 19 fall days. Ratals to Oreatly Enlarge Navy. St. Petersburg, May 27.— Despite the fact that the details are being kept secret, it has been learned that the lat­ est Russian naval program is of the most extensive ever planned by the na­ tion. Tbe special committee recently appointed by the czar has given orders for the immediate laying down of an unusually large number of vessels o f ' every type, including many sub­ marines. A nnmber of vessels are daily being maneuvered outside o f Kronstadt, paying especial attention to torpedo practice and gunnery. Carrying Submarines In Sections. Moscow, May 27.— A long train passed through here early this morn­ ing, carylng three recently bnilt sub­ marines in sections, which are for service either at Port Arthnr er V lad i­ vosto k . Great secrecy was x.aimained in shipping the craft, and none bnt employes were permitted in the sta­ tion prior to ths departure of the train.