8 THE MOWING OREGONEAff, MONDAY AUGUST 19, 901. 10881 A IN THIBET IzarY Menace to the British Supremacy in India. ' ;hika will be forged out i'epan Speculating- on the Possibility of a Franco-Russian Band Across Asia Importance of the Yunnan Railvraj-. i The movements and plans of aggrandlze- ier.t of the Russian bear In the East arc Utiays a source of alarm and a cause lor disquiet to the powers Interested in mental politics. "Whither is Ws greedy iw stretching now?" is a question that frequently asked, Mall adwces received in ine marapura indicate that Russia is (Jssat'ntd with Its carefully arranged en of establishing the ports of Port Lr'bur and Dalny, to control the trade jf Manchuria, now held by the Chinese. r-p tumor now comes that Russia has ffcred to Japan Port Arthur and Dalny ki condition that Japan riiall withdraw on. xcs.tion to the establishment of a Russian " average of 25 bushels per acre. J. P. Mllliorn's 60 acres of Spring wheat yield ed 19 bushels per acre, and on Colonel F. W. Folsom's farm, the Fall sown grain averaged 26 bushels per acre, and the Spring grain 17 bushels per acre. New wheat is being received at both warehouses. IN 'PORTLAND CHURCHES EASTERN MULTNOMAH. Effort Being Made to Extend Rural Free Delivery- FAIRVIBW, Or.,"" Aug. 18. A petition for rural free delivery Is being circulated among the farmers along the Columbia Slough west of this place. William Tag gart has the matter In hand and reports good success In getting names. The re quisite 100 heads of families will easily be secured after which the application will be forwarded to Washington along with a map of the proposed route. It is Intended to have the malls delivered as far West as the Cully road, near Gravelly Butte, thence south to near Rus sellville and through several cross roads back to Fairview. The proposed route will cover a. distance of 23 miles and serve a large .territory. Martin Austin, of Russellville, Is preparing to circulate a petition for free delivery from Mon- RBV. J. F. GHORMLEY ON TE STEEL WORKERS' STRIKE. Dr. Wilson, of Washington, D. C, at the' Presbyterian Chnrch Rev. A. Li. Black's Farewell. At the First Christian Church last even ing, Rev. J. F. Ghormley took for his text: "Come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." Matthew, xl:28. He said in part: "Jesus the Christ was the incarnation of good news to the race. His coming was not for class nor clan, but for the deliv erance of every bond slave. He was no respecter of persons. The Samaritan woman was as worthy to receive his blessing as any of the chosen race and the formula, 'He that feareth God and worketh righteousness is accepted by him,' is the basis of this evangelism. "We muBt not get the wrong concep tion of labor and rest. A greater blessing has never been vouchsafed to the race The sacred xview fouiea. -rvu i.- . .., ,,.., - .v.- -..ii i,i. .-ir' spector will soon visit this section with :"""," .,? . ' ter of activities. This word 'labor' must n.rl11n ...-.,.. -J 41,- .. .. 4nl tVn fw.m ; i waiw At. in than the necessity of labor. Gresham and Fairview routes. An in-. ann . ,,,., ',. nor win soon visit tnis section witn i . . ,"L"::;,fr ,"""" "" lew to establishing these routes and ?hat re '? arm012?.Jith ""?, t cen rrecim.. . f rn,.,.ji TTrv.- Uo. 1 i ui dtiiviiies. J.JJ1S wuiu lauui muo districts are all decided upon it is prob- ,not be ma6 too exclusive. The architect able that there will be a "reorganization as uh a laborer ae the -hodman, of the two routes from Gresham, as it Brawi1 ?ue,tacliu tfm, ,braln ls helPleS3 Is now seen where improvements can and worthless . Think of Jt as you may we be made In the service. haYe no 'et f"e beyond the sound of nick and ax. of thp masons and the car- j penters of Solomon's temple, In which we j this church. Here 'is one of the most Ball In Her Ear. Little Maggie Prettyman, of Rockwood, lifted up, will draw all men unfo me." He said in part: " - "If a minister 25 years ago were to preach from this text -there -would be no difficulty to know Just what he was going to say, but now the1 situation ls altogether different. We don't know what .Is com ing. TheYe Is something higher thanj form, however. Doctrine and all that arc good In their place",, but there is some thing better to carry to the sinner. We must carry Christ to him. It will do no, good to explain to him the beauties in the life of Christ, for these will not reach nor touch him, but he must be made to feel the fatherhood of Chrl9t and his saving pov.er. Contemplation of good things Is elevating, and so with the beau ties of Christ's life, but these are not efficacious in the salvation of men. Christ must be lifted up before men. He must be taken Into the sick room and to the dying. What good would it do to tell the dying sinner about the divine character of Chrlstr He must be made acquainted with Christ's saving power. CRrist must be lifted, up before the dying sinner. The. i simplest, most direct way to do this Is the better. "If 20 or more members of this church were burning with a desire to save sin Tiers, there would be a revival right here. Ycu know how it has been in the past. Christ would he lifted up. Through the centuries of the past, where Christ has been lifted up in the true sense of the text, there have been light and Christian progress. I could tell you something of the sacrifices of the Coreans and the Chi nese. How they yield up everything they have, and then give their lives. To them Christ is lifted up. They are ready to give up everything for him. You are soon to have a new pastor of t- STRANGE DEATH OF GIRL ALICE POTTER PROBABLY STUXG BY A STRANGE INSECT. i Nation at Mcsampho. In' the south P"t a ball from a bicycle bearing in one .ores if this charge is maae. viaai- (cstock will "become the terminus of the Siberian Railway, with steamer lines kacHrg out from its "harbor to all parts uf the " o-".d. ""s Russia planning to menace British J V.'y is another question ot acssromg it erst in the East, There is no aouoi :at Russia is trying to get China to sur- hrder Chinese Turkestan as part -of the rrect plan of surrounding and checking Eritish advance, while at the ysme lme taking a snail step to the ultimate rx - laaucn cr tne isussian aream ol a lrcu mi unhampered outlet on the sea. This, i h the attempts that the Czar is maxin-j establish his influence In Tnibet, to- Nther -nilh the building of the Yunnan waj by France, has given rise to r;-y speculations. Suppose France com. t cs the railroad as planned, running rh c'nost to the mountains of Thibet, izi Russia, by pouring out treasure and .Strains herculean power, builds a rail ed tbromrh the most mountainous coun ts in the world to join ine oanus ui etl of its allv. Then Russian troops ?cu"d b landed In four days at the Gulf :f Tonquin, and British India would be fecually enveloped. The Kobe Herald, commenting on this speculation, franK- L emits tnat it suggests msnus ol me -tiraI fancy, but holds that sucn a '-vfiopment of affairs ls neither lmpossi- - nor improbable. The Heram says: It seems as if we were again on the jve or important events concenuug uro : instant problem of Russian expansion. Thibetan mission has been received at erhof bv the Czar and it is surmised on hod enough grounds. It seems to us, that Thibetan mission would not journey an itbe way to St Petersburg unless some 2Tt of political broth were to be cooked it the end of the long pilgrimage. It )s reported that the object of the mission 'i& o secure the Russian Government's Protection against possible British ag ression from India, but probably It would ,e well to assume that this report is sbei.t as near or as far from the truth as Efe the possibility of the British encroach- ttrt which It nredicates. The dispatcn Ind reception of the mission have a sig nificance apart from its special purpose. however. Nominally. Thibet ls a sort oi protectoraleJi, and the Grand to St. Petersburg ana nis the Czar point to a pos- Ferance oi tne connection win and the substitution of a protec- late link with Russia, China being in- sable of holdins: herself together, her Fotectlon of Thibet Is purely ideal, and It mas very well be that the Grand Xama, who unites the offices of high nrlest and ruler of the country, seeks to Sattach a more reliable guarantor of the integrity and semi-Independence of the lUT'try in the nerson of the Czar, xnis Fvnothesls connects vers' well with the f statement from North China sources to the I effect that the Russian Minister at Pekin ! seeks to secure China's assent to the in dependence of Thibet, "which wxmld cer i ta.nly mean the substitution of Russia for CT'na as the suzerain power. What makes the possibility of the com pletion of this great coup specially inter esting: is the fact that it wouio tore- shadow remarkable possibilities In China far a Asia from the operation of the Husso- iFrench alliance. It happens that the ! French Chamber has' just approved the immediate commencement of the Yunnan ! Railwaj , the construction of which is a Chinese concession to France, and M. IDcumex Governor of French Indo-Chlna, jas launched the company which is to idertake the scheme. It Is a little fanci- pcrhaps to descry a connection be t-en the French railway undertaking In uthern China and a possible extension cf Russian influence or authority into and x:rr Thibet, but the circumstances are Hwcnderfully significant on the map. 1 Frarce and Russia are firm allies. M. Delcasse In the French Chamber, among ether things, said: 'Our policy In Chinese matters is essentially the same as that cf Russia, for-our Interests are common. I It s admitted that when the Yunnan : iR-5Jlwav s eomnleted France will nrac- Mly have secured a protectorate over ft province. Yunnan Is one of the Chl- ss provinces that touch Thibet, or ap- Hr to touch It. for the boundaries of all e Chinese provinces are Ill-defined. With Thibet linked by the slightest of bonds to Russia a putative line of territorial In- tfaerce across Asia, from St. Petersburg to the China Sea, would be created under the auspices of the Franco-Russian alli ance a line of influence which, if the al liance remain as firm and as effective as has hitherto proved, might easily de- lop into something more than a politi- "brysalls. "It ls a pretty thing to look upon on the map It suggests infinite possibil ities in the future. If Russia and France kwere to join Jiands across the mountains jf Southeastern Tbibet there is no saying rtat big fish the drag-net of their in- 'ienre, thus stretched across the Con- scent of Asia, might pick up. The' alli ance would envelop British India all along A is northern border, from near Herat to i ear Mandalay. and although Thibet Is le highest and most mountainous coun- In the world, who knows but that In e far future a Russian railway through i,e land of the Grand Lama may meet French road at rail-head, at Yunnan ' That would bring Russian battalions o the Gulf of Tonquin at three or four ys notice, snapping their fingers at the Kilance of an enemy's fleet patrolling the routes from Port Arthur. It is very mZLl ..f ctisvu, uuuuuras, L& ijoa uucii au- mitted but at least we see that, with Frarce pushlngr ahead her great under taking in Yunnan and Russia feeling her way across Thibet, interesting flights of the political imagination are suggested. After all It is some times the impossible as It is the unexpected, that happens" oi ner ears a few weeks ago and was unable to get it out again. When it became painful she told her mother, who was compelled to take her to Good Sam aritan Hospital, where a surgical opera tion was performed. Inflamation has set in and the child is now In a serious con dition, but is receiving the best of care with hopes of a speedy recovery. Notice to Wheelmen. ' By order of the County Court the bi cycle paths for a distance of three blocks on the Base Line, through Montavilla, have been closed to wheelmen. A peti tion was signed by SO" residents of the VIHa asking that such action be taken because of the frequent accidents to chil dren. Large signs have been put up re quiring bicyclists to keep in the middle of the road. Free Public Librnry. Four women of Troutdale, Mrs. Mays, Mrs. Harlow Mrs. Hurshal and Mrs. Williams, are endeavoring to organize a free library. They will be assisted by women from Fairview and will place tne membership fee at 2o cents a month. Subscribers will be permitted to take books home. Rey. T. L. Eliot, of Port land, has promised assistance and will deliver a lecture next month for the benefit of the fund. Concrete Viaduct. The O. R. & N. Company, following the example of the county, Is building a concrete viaduct near Fairview, to take the place of a small bridge which spans the creek there. It will be 90 feet long, with an opening six feet wide and tight feet high for the stream to pass through. The work is in charge of W. McKenize. Brief Notes. Troutdale will have a sewer system which is being put in by the county. It is intended to drain the hill south of Main street, so as to protect that thor oughfare. The sewer will have an outlet in the Sandy River. Captain Brown's English bloodhound, Dewey, for which he traded a fine horse two years ago, has mysteriously disap peared. It was valued at $150. ON THE RIFLE RANGES. Yesterday' Practice Attended by a Large Number of Women. Many persons, the majority of them women, attended the rifle practice of the Third Regiment, O. N. G., on the ranges near the City Park yesterday. In the ehooting Saturday and yesterday the fol lowing men qualified: At 200 Yards. FIRST-CLASS MEN. Private Plummer, Company C 12 Private Neal, Company C 12 Private H. Douglas, Company C 12 Private Robin, Company C 13 Private Wagner, Company C 13 Sergeant Jacobson, Company B 12 T 13 15 16 Private Spath, Company G RIFLEMEN. Private Lucas. Comnanv B Private Cuyler, Company G 15 MARKSMEN. Private Butts. Comnanv B Sergeant Bowman, Company C 1G Corporal Thomas. Comnanv F is Corporal Allen, Company F 17 Private Jolly, Company F 17 Private Senger, Company F 17 SHARPSHOOTERS. Musician Woelm, Company B 18 Private Masten, Company-J3 18 Sergeant Daugherty, Company B 18 Lieutenant Bird, Naval Battalion 18 Lieutenant Allen, Company F 19 Private Best, Company F 19 Sergeant Allen, Company B 19 Corporal Rogers, Company G 19 Private Hoven, Company F 20 Musician Smith, Company F 20 Private Parsons, Company B 20 Sergeant Mead, Company B 20 Corporal Hoberg, Company C 20 DISTINGUISHED SHARPSHOOTER. Captain Dunbar, Company B 21 At 300 Yards. FIRST-CLASS MEN. Private Royle, Company G 16 Corporal Allen, Company F 17 Corporal Hoberg, Company C 15 Lieutenant Bird, Naval Battalion 17 RIFLEMEN. Sergeant Ivlnney, N. C. S is Private Doble, Company G 18 Private McKay, Company G 18 Private Senger. Company F 18 Private Joliy, Company F 18 Private Maginnls, Company B 18 Captain Dunbar, Company B 18 Corporal Rogers, Company G 19 SHARPSHOOTER. Private L. Thompson, Company D 21 At 500 Yards. SHARPSHOOTERS. Sergeant Martin, Company D 22 have a splendid example of the division of labor. In the building up of humanity the centuries have brought us to crit ical heights: "We are lhlnjr. we are dwelling. In a grand and awful time, In an age on ages telling To be living ls sublime. "We are now In the midst of a great industrial struggle, not a new one, only a change of the forces to different posi tions on the field of battle. For my part I am glad that through the comblnatiqn of capital we can have the eaijth ribbed with steel, the atmosphere made reso nant with electrified thought, and that gi gantic institutions are made possible by which the earth Is to be blessed, but be it remembered that however great the thing builded and important, the builder is greater and more important. These in stitutions have come Into being, as much by the combination of labor, as the world understands this term, as by the combina tion of capital. No one complains of in justice on the -part of Industrial estab lishments if in times of depression it ls not profitable to capital to keep them in operation." In times of prosperity, when the wage-earner is the last to be ad vanced, no one should complain if labor should cease when its work Is a loss to itself. But the present status is not one of wages, but whether labor shall in Its organized capacity dictate to capital whom It shall and whom It shall not em pldy. In this question the very existence of organized labor, is at stake. "It is needless for me to tell you that there are two sides to this question, but In its political and moral aspects. This is not the time nor the place for the con sideration of Its political phases. On the moral side either party or both parties may be led by the firing of human pas sions to commit Irreparable wrongs. It ls unfortunate that while one class of la borers is struggling for existence, an other class of tollers innocent are sacri ficed on the altar of this atonement. But the sacrifice will not have been made in vain if capital and labor shall be com pletely reconciled and both enter Into the enjoyment of the products of their united efforts. When the Christ shall have been completely enthroned the joint profits of the machine propelled by steam, and the machine propelled by mind will be shared in just proportions by each. Then capital will have its legitimate reward, and ihe laborer will enter Into his rest, having received his hire. The .new evangel will be good news to capital as well as to labor. It will enable every man, la boring man and capitalist, to sit under his own vine and fig tree. Capital will continue to have Its accumulative ad vantage labor will- have gained its ac cumulative right, and each will rejoice in the prosperity of the 'other, and on this holy union God will pronounce his bless ing, and they will go forth to the earth's conquest." tractive fields In the West for lifting up Christ. Will you help the new man when he comes in your midst, or will you wait till' he finds you, or until you have measured and estimated him. A man ousht to be a well-rounded Christian after five years, and able to stand alone and be a help in the work of lifting up Christ, and not a. drag. There is such a thing as knowing that one ls saved, and we ought to seek that knowledge, and know that Christ ls lifted up In our hearts." FAREWELL SERMONS. Rev. A. I. Black to Enter a New York Theological College. Rev. A. L. Black, of the Calvary Bap tist Church, East Side, delivered his fare well eermons yesterday, before his de parture for Rochester, N. Y., where he will enter the theological college. His relations with Calvary Baptist Church have been pleasant. At the morning serv ice he spoke on( "Christian Growth," his text being from II Peter, 111:18: "But you grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ." He said: "Growth is the demand of Nature. In all the realm of God's creation, when growth ceases decay begins. In the realm of spirit the same law holds true ad vancement or death. The rippling stream, tumbling and tossing over logs and "rocks, plunging over precipices, lending 10,000 glittering diamonds upward to kiss the sunlight, owes its music, beautytand use fulness to motion. The stagnant pool never attracts our attention, except by its scent, or ugliness, from both of which we shrink. It never wins our admira tions, yet the stagnant pool Is composed of the same elements as the streamlet. The difference is simply this: The one is active, the other is not. Would you live, be beautiful and useful? Then Imitate the flowing of stream get in motion. God never honors a sluggard In nature, and he will never honor one In spirit. "To grow we must eat. Nourishment is necessary to any kind of life. The babe In Christ must have proper nourishment if he is to grow. Peter is kind and tells us what kind of food to use. 'As new born babes, desire the sincere milk of the word, that ye may grow thereby.' Some Christians starve themselves; others eat that which they cannot digest; so some are lean and others dyspeptic. Paul said to the Corinthian church; 'I have fed you with milk, and not with meat, for hither to yewere not able to bear It, neither yet now are ye able, for ye are yet carnal.' Some good people 'kick' because the preacher feeds them milk. Well, milk is good for the carnal. 'But grow In grace, and In the knowledge of our Lord and Sa vior, Jesus Christ.' This ls my prayer for you. This ls better than wealth, or power, or glory, or any earthly blessing. If you are In favor with God, you have the assurance of 'all other things.' " Blood-Poisoning Resulted From 'Wound on the Upper Lip Mi crobe Theory Advanced. Miss Alice Potter, 15 years old, died at Gqod Samaritan Hospital yesterday of blocd-poisonlng, caused probably by the' bite of a strange Insect. She was bitten on the lip while Ashing for crawfish near Portland. Miss Potter was graduated from the High School in the June class. She was a daughter of Mrs. J. M. Potter, a widow, who lives on Marquam Hill. Ten days ago she was as healthy and bright a girl as one would meet In Portland, and she said to her mother that she wag going away crawfishing. She returned home In high spirits, but two days after ward she complained of a swelling on her upper lip. As the pain Increased, Dr. Clarence L. Nichols was summoned. He said the trouble was blood-poisoning, but could not state positively what was the primary cause. Last Tuesday Miss1 Potter's sufferings increased, and her face was painfully swollen, and she was removed to Good Samaritan Hospital. All the remedies known to medical science were used to save her. but to no avail. She died yes terday, with the members of her family around her bedside. To a reporter Dr. Nichols said: "As to the primary cause of the blood-poisoning which led to Miss Potter's death, I cannot positively say. She may have been stung on the lip by 'a passing In sect as she was fishing, or while han dling the bait a microbe might have got under her finger nail and been brought In contact with the lip as she uncon sciously passed one of her hands over her mouth. After she returned from the fishing the swelling on the lip dla not start Immediately, and because of this fact she may not have been stung by a passing Insect. The trouble may have come from a, microbe which was origi nally lodged in the bait." r CONCERNING PENSIONS AGAIN i i Pension Frauds tlnterpreted as "Vili fication of tlie Deserving. Private Brown, Company C 22 CARNIVAL ADMISSIONS. Attractions to Be Great, but Tickets Only 25 Cents. "Wbeat Yield in Lane County. JUNCTION CITY. Qr.t Aug. IS. Inquir ies among: the farmers of this section : of Lane County, with a view of an ap- Iproxlrtiate estimate of the average yield fjjf wheat so tar as can dc oeiermineo, Ireealted satisfactorily. The quality of t!?e rrain Is excellent On the farm of 3d Bailey, aajoimngr tne city limits, ao seres proaucea uw ousneis, an aver- of 31 bushels per acre. Seventy seres of Fall grain on Hon. C. W. Wash- asroe'iS place yielded an average of 16 lushels per acre. F. B. Howard, from acres of Fall sown grain. I The lines along with the Carnival com mittee Is working are strictly in the in terest of the people, and consequently popular prices will prevail. The general admission to the Exposition bulldlner will be 25 cents for adults and 10 cents for children. This will admit all to the ex hibits, and to the spacious music hall or auditorium, where there will be serial and other performances which under ordinary circumstances would be worth three times the price of ad mission. The afternoon and evening con certs will be worth twice the price of admission. Another attraction that will come In under the same admission fee Is the en trance to Multnomah Field, the five acre tract where many events will take place. Access to the field will be through doors that will be built into the south side of the Exposition building, connect ing with which broad staircases will be constructed. The a.rray of attractions In connection with the many exhibits, the music and the opportunity for general sightseeing makes the coming Carnival the main event of the year. It Is a marvel how so varied a pro gramme can be provided for 25 cents. The explanation of the price is in the many thousands of people who will at tend, and in the fact that the Carnival Sinners Must Be Taught the Father hood of Christ. Bishop Earl Cranston occupied the pul pit of Centenary Methodist Church, East Side, yesterday morning. Rev. F. E. Coul- xcJii ho run in thp interest nf th nonlP. I ter assisted in the services. The bishop ireshed out 2700 bushels of wheat, an and not as a money-making enterprise, j preached from the text: ''And I, if I be down to posterity permanently. ' OVERCOMING THE LAW OF LIFE, Dr. Wilson, of Washington, D. C, at the First Presbyterian Church. Rev. George P., Wilson, D. D of Wash ington, occupied the pulpit of the First Presbyterian Church yesterday morning. His subject was "Overcoming as the Law of Life." taken from Rev. 11:7: "To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the tree of life that groweth in the midst of the paradise of God." The theme was introduced by showing the pervasiveness of the Idea of over coming the Scripture. Israel as a nation survived through conflict. Paul's great conception of Christian life was at a war fare. John, from whose writings the text is taken, most of all emphasizes the law of life as victory overcoming. "The lowest levels of life Illustrate the law," said Dr. Wilson. "The tree crows by the vital power overcoming the law of gravitation and carrying the elements supplied by the earth up into branch and leaf and flowers and fruit a lift as real as that of an elevator. The waxing of the Spring and the waning of the Autumn are phenomena of the alternate victory and defeat of life. The law finds illustra tion in the scientific theory of the progress ot life. They tell us that from the low est germs, life has 'mounted through all the spires of form' to the most complex and highest by a struggle for existence which has known no cessation. It is not necessary that we should discuss the truth or falsehood of this theory, and there Is much of truth in It. It well ex emplifies the great fact of all life over coming is life." After showing how social phenomena come under the same great law, the speak er explained that political and national existence conform to it. as well. "Rome lived," he said, "as long as she was able to overcome and Incorporate neighboring races in her great sj'stem. When she lost this power, the barbarians were upon her and her civilization was submerged. We may not approve the course of events by w!ilch this Nation of ours has been thrust out into the sea and expanded, until the ocean gems of Spain are now upon our hands. But It ls the law of all the National life of history. The only way a nation can avoid It Is by imitating the isolation of China a wall on one side, the sea on the other, and death silently doing the work within. Even then, some fatality will league the powers, and be fore the wedge of destiny the. Nation will be wide open to all the world." The preacher further showed that by overcoming the law of the ethical and spiritual life. Jesus himself lived a life of strenuous achievement. His tempta tion and his passion were the conspicuous points of the great life which In death purchased our redemption. After showing that the Christian's experience Is one of continuous overcoming. Dr. Wilson main tained that even the eternal life would Illustrate the same law. "We shall live strenuously, even In eternity. Heaven will be a place of rest. Here we labor six days and rest one. There we shall labor seven day's and rest seven; work and rest interblended. In the ceaseless activities of the eternal life." SALVATION OF MEN. YOUNG MAN, GOTO TILLAMOOK Ex-Governor Pennoyer Says It Is nn Ideal Happy Valley. Ex-Governor Pennoyer has returned from a trip to Tillamook, and, although he was there a week, he seems sorry that he did not stay longer. He says Tilla mook was a revelation to him, and he found It to be one of the literal "happy valleys" he has read and dreamed of. - "Tillamook Is fresh and green," said the ex-Governor, "and the cows are all fat and sleek. It ls a great dairy re gion, and between Tillamook and Gari baldi I passed half a dozen cheese fac tories. Tillamook Is noted for its good cheese and butter, and it was a great sight to see the long rows of big milk cans outside the farmhouses. The whole country is fresh and green over there, and I consider it one of the finest dairy regions I ever saw. It will keep a cow to the acre, and the business must be profitable, for ex-Senator Maxwell, who has 25 cows now, will soon increase the herd to 50. If I were a young man I would try for a start In Tillamook in pref erence to any other part of the state." Although he has been in . Oregon 46 years, this was the ex-Governor's first visit to Tillamook, and he says that he enjoyed It very much. At Hobsonvllle, which is named after John Hobson, the Astoria pioneer, he saw the big mill of the Truckee Lumber Company, and at Garibaldi he enjoyed sitting on the sandy beach and basking in the sun and breath ing the salt sea air. Between Tillamook and Hobsonvllle Mr. Pennoyer rode on a stage that ls driven by a woman. The route is eight miles long. Although 70 years of age, Governor Pennoyer made the round trip to Tillamook by stage via North .Yamhill, and enjoyed the nov elty of sleeping In a barn. On the re turn trip he left Tillamook City at 6 P. M., and the stage came qut 13 miles to the Trask House, where the hotel had burned down. They had tents for trav elers, but the Governor requested the privilege of sleeping In the barn, and was accommodafed. He enjoyed the nov elty very much until the east wind struck his head along toward morning, when he had to use his soft hat for a night cap. "Tillamook Is a land of logs and green grass and cows and dairies and big trees and lumbering, and It has a great future," said the ex-Governor. "I am glad I made the trip." He Was a Singular Old Man. Paris Messenger. j singular old man has just passed away- at Toulon. He was one of the few survivors of the Lagonbran disaster, ex ceedingly poor, but a friend of everybody In the town, where he was a familiar object. He lived upon charity, but never asked it, and.Jie went about the street leading seven little, old and ugly dogs, to which he was intensely attached. If he sold one, which he occasionally' did, the anlmil was sure to find its way back to him speedily. He carried a basket on his arm. and when any person put anything into It he would make the dogs dance for them. He was always very bright and gay, and fond of the soldiers. In fact his favorite plaything was a plaster mod el of a soldier, which was found clasped in his arms when he was discovered dead. The eccentric old man will he much missed In Toulon, and his dogs will be difficult to console. It neds only a Dick ens or a "oulda" to hand his memory PORTLAND. Aug. 17. (To the Editor.) In my letter of August 3, on pensions, in reply to the clipping, from the Boston Transcript, I was able only to name the different classes of pensioners, not hav ing the data for the number in each class, and I feel very .grateful to the editorial in your issue of August 10 for furnishing these numbers, thereby fully sustaining my estimate by his figures. The gist of my contention ls In the state ment that, after eliminating all other classes, "It Is quite probable that the number of veterans of the' Civil War now on the pension rolls will not exceed 30 per cent of ,the 2,432,554 borne on the rolls of the Army and Navy during the Civil War." The editorial of August 10 says: "The total number of male Invalid pen sioners whose pension dates from the Civil War was 753.878 on June 30. 1900." 1 take these figures to be correct, and, as 753,878 ls but a fraction of 1 per cent over 30 per cent of 2,432,554, my estimate was almost absolutely correct. But the correction of figures and esti mates is not the Important question at issue. The Boston Transcript is undoubt edly " a very able, upright, Intelligent newspaper," and so Is The Portland Ore gonian. Yet the Boston Transcript told but half a truth, and In such a manner that, to one accustomed.to the tone of such journals when treating of pensions, It is quite evident that it was the intention to mislead the average reader. But the Union veterans feel outraged that Influ ential journals should continually prate of the great annual disbursement for pen sions, should Iterate and reiterate the charge of gross frauds on the part of pensioners, should endeavor to belittle the numbers, the services and the sacrifices of their once-lauded soldiery, and even to impugn their motives then and now. Al few words only are necessary on the subject of fraudulent pensions. The gen eral pension laws allow specific rates of pension for specified Injuries and disabil ities acquired in the service and in the line of duty, having no regard to the financial condition of claimant, and it is simply a matter of satisfactory proofs. A different principle comes In in what Is called the "disability act," of June, 1890, which requires, first, proof of service, and then proof only of present disability, not the result ot his own vicious habits, in capacitating him from earning a living by manual labor, and in this act no re gard is had to claimant's financial con dition. "When satisfactory proofs are fur nished under any of these various acts applicable to a case, the pension Is al lowed, and I respectfully submit that, when the law' has been complied with and the proofs are correct, there ls no fraud. If the laws are too liberal, change them. Let us compare the Mexican War, Its objects, alms, duration, and pensions aris ing therefrom, with like points of the Civil War. The Mexican War was waged ostensibly for possession of a strip of territory between the Nueces and the Rio 'Grande Rivers, In dispute between Mex ico and Texas at time of the annexation of the latter. It began in 1846, and lasted two years. The total number on American side of all arms was 101,282; number of deaths in battle and from disease, nearly 2500. In 18S7, 41 years after outbreak of that war, Congress passed an act pensioning every survivor upon becoming 62 years of age, and every surviving widow. The Civil War began In 1S61, and lasted four years, was waged for the very existence of our Nation and Government, had 2,432, 554 Union men of all arms engaged, cost 300,000 loyal lives, and left a National debt of $3,000,000,000. It Is now over 40 years since the outbreak of theCivil War, and there Is as yet no age limit for pensions, and many of the veterans far past the age of 70 are not on the pension rolls. It is the magnitude of the annual dis bursement of $140,000,000 for pensions that appalls the pension critics, while they forget or ignore the magnitude of the conflict, of the services rendered, and of the interests involved, as well as of the re sults attained. That we may the better hring this sub ject within our comprehension, let us di vide these large numbers by 10, and sup pose that a Union force of 243,255 had put down the rebellion, that every sur vivor and surviving widow were pen sioned to the total amount of $14,000,000 an nual disbursement. In that event there would probably be no adverse criticism, and yet the principle Is the same In the larger number as In the smaller. Think of the magnitude of the results of winning in that great conflict. African slavery abolished almost by a stroke, a country united as never before and Its people ,becomlng homogeneous, unexampled pros perity prevailing, the National debt so greatly reduced that The Oregonlan as sures us the present per capita ls but $14 52 with annual charge of 44 cents, the least of any nation in the world. It was the services and sacrifices of the men now being vilified that kept our country one Nation and made such results possible. The generation contemporary with the war and realizing the worth of the citi zen soldier and his services Is fast passing away, and a new generation is coming on, to which the Civil War is but a ma'tter of history, and a great wrong is done when the veterans of that war are persistently and indiscriminately charged with procur ing their pensions through fraud and their patriotism and devotion to their country belittled or ignored. If any critic knows of a fraudulent pen sion case, let him report it and point out the proofs. General denunciation is cheap and easy, and not capable of dis proof, but creates prejudice that cuts the worthy veteran to the heart. Again I say, "give us fair play." G. E. CAUKIN. COftfllHT ttlt IT TMI f A OCT I A QAMKC CO. CllCINNATI ta(BE9SBBBBi AS TO CLOTHING. HERE is an epitaph in a Vermont church yard: "I expected this hut not so soon." Such is the epitaph on clothing worn out in the wash-tub. Underclothing: may be fragile, yet it ought not to wear out in ten weeks. But this isn't wear; it is decay. You buy 5 cents worth of cheap soap and you lose the equivalent of 50 cents in the wash-tub. Ivory Soap will not harm the most delicate, fabric. Is it wise not to use it? IVORY SOAP IS 99& PER CENT. PURE- . MARKET PLACE WANTED PROPOSAL TO REMODEL THE OLD MECHANICS' FAIR BUILDIXG. At Small Expense the Structure Cnn Be Made to Yield a Respect able Income. The desirability of a market place where every one having fruit, vegetables, hay, etc.. to sell may go to meet pur chasers, is plain to all. The block do nated to the city for a market block has been occupied for many years by the old Mechanics Fair building, which has long been more of a nuisance than any thing else. It brings the city only $30 per montn rent, ira F. Powers Is arguing the practicability of remodeling the wings on the north and south sides to make room for the wagons of market men. He says that with a little fixing up the cen tral portion can be made to bring in $200 per month rent. He says there Is no reason for tearing down the old building and building a new market at present, as this would cost $30,000 to $40,000. and the old building can, at small expense, be made to answer every purpose. With the north and south wlnsrs torn down, there would be plenty of room for all the gardeners and market men, and shelter for them In the rainy season could be arranged. The main central portion of the building could be fixed up, and there would be demand for room there for a blacksmith shop, a gro cery store, a saloon, etc., and the mat tress factory run In the building would also rent a portion of the space. Mr. Powers says the argument for de molishing the old building on the ground that It Is a flre trap is not valid, and tnat a large open structure like this does not burn readily and a flre there could be quickly put out. He has been discussing with several large property-owners the question of remodeling the building so that all the space required will be avail able for market purposes, and the clty wlll receive $200 per month rent In addi tion. These property-owners agree with his views in the" matter, and the ques tion will probably be brought before the Council at an early date. nal Revenue Collector at Louisville, Ky., shown to have violated the law. Nothing done In the case of the Assist ant Postmaster at Jersey City, shown to have violated the law. In short, nothing done anywhere to ex tend or even enforce the law and rules, and secure from subordinate officials- some respect for them, but much done to break down the law, and much everything, ap parentlyleft undone to make violations of and contemptuous regard for the law and rules perfectly safe In all depart ments of the Government. Mr. McKlnley has so far shown that he has no more re gard for his reform pledges than he has had for his own conceptions of "plain duty"' in a well-known case, or for the National code of morality as propounded by himself In respect to the still better known matter of "criminal aggression.'" CHICAGO'S MERCHANT SHIP. First Veusel Direct to London Sur prised the Shippers of That Povt. PERSONAL MENTION. A. B, Stelnbach has returned from an Eastern trip. Ex-Governor Z. F. Moody, of The Dalles, Is at the Imperial. Rey. A. A. Morrison, of Trinity Church, is expected home today from New York. M. It, Chamberlain, clerk of the Boaid of School Land Commlsslaner3, Is In the city. F. S. Le Grow, a pioneer woolgrower of Walla Walla, Ib at the Hotel Port land. State Senator J. D. Daly, ot Corvallls, was In -Portland yesterday on his way to Puget Sound. Adam Andrew, president of the Shasta Water Company, of San Francisco, Is at the Hotel Portland. Captain A. F. Prescott, TJ. S. A., for merly of the Second Oregon, Is at the Imperial accompanied by his wife. B. D. Croker returned yestorday from Puget Sound and went to his home at Walla Walla on last evening's train. Qhlef Justice .JBean, of the Supreme Court of Oregon, and wife, and Asso ciate Justice Moore ancl daughter, left over the O. R. & N. Saturday evening for Denver" to attend the annual meet ing of the American Bar Association. From Denver they will go to Louisville. Ky., to attend the Knights Templar Conclave, and then make a tour of the principal cities of the East, returning home in time for the opening of court October 1. NEW YORK, Aug. IS. The following Northwestern people are at ?ew York hotels: From Portland J. J. Balleray, at the Gllsey. From Spokane Mrs. G. W. Taylor, 'at the St. Denis; Miss M. L. Pitcher, at the Albert. From Walla Walla J. W. Cockerly, at the Manhattan. h From Olympla J. E. Darley, at the Im perial. From Seattle F. Atwood and wife, at the Grand; J. W. Ranger, at the Grand Union. London Mail. The very latest triumph of American commercial enterprise was that achieved by the arrival, in the early hours ot Satur day morning, at I'he South West India docks of the steamship Northeastern with a carsro of 2600 tons, the very first vessel to carry merchand.se all the way from Chicago to London. Most of the exports of the United States come from t rritory around the Great Lakes and the West, and these exports have hitherto had to be carried by Tail from Chicago to the great seaboard cities, such as New York and Boston, and shipped thence to their destinations a costly and often unsatisfactory arrange ment. But the Norfhwestern Steamship Com pany, of Chicago, wishing to "get right here'" with as little delay as possible, has bu It a preliminary ocean fleet of steamers ( specially suited to the navigation of the canal locks around fhe rapids on Sc. Law rence River, and by way of this route to the Atlantic the Northeastern. laden with timber, canned provisions, glucose, etc. sa'led for London. A Dally Mall representative, who was enabled bj Messrs,. G. W, Shelton & Co.. the European agents of Dhe line, to In spect the Northeastern on Saturday, came to the conclusion that a visit to the ship would be for the owner of the ordlnary Brlt'ish cargo-boat a 1 beral education In American methods In the first place the crew is treated with the greatest consideration, every man having a spring wire bed, bedding and linen: they have excellent quarters well-appo nted lavatories, with a bath, fitted 'with hot and cold water In each. I All the rooms are lighted by electricity I Officers and men dine together, partaking of precisely the same excellent food. In a cosy dining saicon. ine stewards sal- , ary Is h gher than that of the majority of chief officers in British vessels, while the chief engineers 20 ($100) a month, the quartermaster's 9 ($15). and the "watchman'r " 7 ($35), are greatly in ad vance of the Tages of British sailors in similar positions. First Woman to Receive Degree. London Telegraph Paris ltter. Signora Carlotta Cipriani, a young and beautiful Italian lady, has had the honor of being the first woman In France to take the degree of Doctor of Letters,, the highest which the faculty of letters of the University of Paris can confer. The lady "argued" her thesis before her ex aminers with so much success that th latter, when they recorded their votes, each placed a white bail in the tradi tional urn. The candidate accordingly passed with the highest honors. The am phitheater of the Sourbonne, where the signora read her thesis, afterward discuss ing it, as required, with the examiners, was crowded with fashionably dressed ladles, who gave round after round of ap plause when the learned member of thlr sex was proclaimed a doctor of letters. Administration's Weak Point. Springfield Republican. Let President McKInley's record as to clvll-servlce reform be again brought down to date, remembering that he and his party had pledged themselves to en force the law and extend It where practicable: No extensions of the law or rules or classified service. Instead, a sweeping reduction of the classified or reformed service by the Presidential order of May 29, 1S99. The appointment of an avowed enemy ot clvll-service reform as one of the com missioners to enforce it. No attention paid to exposures by the Civil-Service Reform League of specific cases of fraud and unfitness among In dian agents. Nothing done respecting proved vio lations of the law at the Indianapolis postofnee. Nothing done in the case of the Customs Collector at El Paso, Tex., shown to have violated the law. Nothing done in the case, of the Inter- Tj f What is wanted of soap for the skin is to wash it clean and not hurt it. Pure soap does that. - This is why we want pure soap; and when we say pure, we mean without alkali. Pears' is pure; no free alkali. There are a thou sand virtues of soap; this one is enough. You can trust a soap that has no biting alkali in it. Alisorts of stores sell it, especially druggists; all sorte of people use it. I