10 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER I, 1901. L ECORD-BREAKING MONTH OCTOBER "WHEAT AOT3 FIX)TJR SHIP MENTS WERE ENORMOUS. Nearly 2,300,000 Bushel Grain Standard Adopted Grain Han dlers AIc for Higher Wages. Wheat and flour exports from Portland for the month ending yesterday were the largest on record for a corresponding month, and the amount of grain cleared Is seldom equaled In the heaviest months, which come later 4n the season. The for eign lleet consisted of 16 full and one part cargoes of wheat and three cargoes of bar ley for Europe, and four flour steamships for the Orient. This fleet carried a total or 1,796,088 bushels of wheat, 322,220 bush els of barley, and 89.310 barrels of flour. This amount, with the wheat and flour shipments to San Francisco, brought the total for the month (flour included) up to 2,272,778 bushels, valued at $1,307,334, 'and the barley was valued at $136,193. Exclu sive of the two barley ships, the fleet or 17 vessels and their cargoes compare 'as follows with the corresponding month in former years: No. Wheat, Tear vessels, bushels. 1901 17 1,796.093 :909 13 1,291,237 18S9 11 794.1S1 IS 18 l,453,bi4 li7 17 1,727,292 1S86 15 1.2S2.923 1895 13 924,723 The movement of the crop from this port, as well as from Tacoma and Seattle, Is unusually heavy, the ehlpments from all of the Northwestern ports for October exceeding those of the three preceding months of the season. The combined ship ments of Seattle and Tacoma for the month were 1.956,656 bushels of wheat, 131. 27S barrels of flour, and part of a cargo ot barley. Reducing the flour to a wheat basis and It Is apparent that the three ports combined have shipped pretty close to 5,000,000 -bushels of wheat In a slnglp month. Portland will 'beat her October record next month, but It will be Decem ber or January before the Puget Sound cities again make such a showing, al though they will start off today with the steamship Wyefleld, whjch will clear with 46.591 barrels of flour for Vladlvostock. The. total shipments of wheat and flour from the Pacific Northwest for the sea son to date have reached a total of 9.051, 000 bushels, the largest on record for a corresponding date, and about one-fourth of the exportable surplus from the North west, if the carry-over at the end of the season Is as large as It has been for the past few years. PERILS OP PUGET SOUND. Another Vessel Nearly Pounded to Pieces on Smith's Island. Marine underwriters are still suffering more losses at Puget Sound than at any other locality in the West. A Port Town send special to the Seattle Pdst-Intel-ligencor has the following regarding the latest serious disaster, which has fol lowed fast on the heels of the Mackinaw's $50,000 accident: "The schooner E. K. Wood, which went ashore on Smith's Island at 7:50 o'clock Tuesday morning, was yesterday after noon pulled off the beach and brought to this city. The tugs Sea Uon, Holyoke, Dolphin and Magic hooked on to the schooner yesterday forenoon and started her, but the water fell too fast and they were forced to abandon the attempt until the afternoon tide. At 4 o'clock in the afternoon they made another try and suc ceeded In getting the echoner off. "Captain Hanson, of the schooner, was trying to make Falrhaven when he hit the beach on Smith's Island. When pass ing the island a heavy squall struck the vessel and, with the amount of sail she was carrying, she became unmanageable. The captain attempted to Jibe, but the schooner would not -answer her helm and brought up on the land. The place she struck was on a sandsplt on the northeast side of the Island. The heavy seas which were running all day Tuesday had a fair sweep at the vessel and she pounded hard. Her rudder and part of her keel were torn off and, had the wind not sub elded, the damage would have been much greater. The schooner will have to dock for repairs before she again gets to sea," ASK FOR HIGHER WAGES. Dock Grain Handlers Send a Peti tion to Their Employers. The Grain Handlers' Union, of this city, is out for higher wages. The members have presented each of the dock proprie tors with a petition asking that their re muneration be advanced to 40 cents per hour straight, and 50 cents per hour over time. The petitions state that the de mand for more money is based on the fact that food, clothing and the other necessi ties of life have advanced In price and they need the money. Several hundred men are employed on the docks at this season of the year, and there is a large fleet of ships to be taken care of. An Informal meeting of the dock proprietors was held yesterday, but no definite under standing was reached as to the treatment of the petition. The men are now paid 30 cents per hour and 40 cents overtime. In the event of a strike the heaviest losers "would be the shipowners and the farm era. All of the ships under charter tor Portland loading have the strike clause, and there would ,be no demurrage to be paid if the strike lasted all Winter. The farmers would suffer through lack of a market for their grain, although a consid erable portion of It might be diverted to Puget Sound if the situation became seri ous here. GRAIN STANDARD ADOPTED. Grades Established for Handling the 1001 Crop of Northwest. The grain committee of the Portland Chamber of Commerce met In this 'city yesterday and adopted a standard for the coming season, establishing a grade on which all of the wheat exported from Ore gon, Washington and Idaho will be soul in the foreign markets. There Is so much similarity In the quality of the two crops, 1900 and 1901, that the standard remains practically the same. Tacoma, Seattle and Portland exporters met last week and showed up samples from -all over the wheat territory, and at that meeting hat! practically agreed on the grade, but left the matter open until yesterday, when It was settled. No. 1 Walla Walla must weigh 58 pounds, and bluestem 58Va. No. 2 must weigh 57 pounds. The standard for barley was placed at 46 pounds per bushel Valley was not finally decided on but will probably jemaln the same as last year. GEDNEY AND THE SEALERS. Yesterday's Arrivals at thePort of Victoria. VICTORIA, Oct. 31. The United States cteamshlp Gedney Is here from Alaska. She has been engaged during the Summer In survey work In Icy Straits and Crows Channel. Her officers report that there will be no radical changes In the chart as a result of the season's work. The sealing schooners Otto, Penelope and Arletes arrived from Behrlng Sea today. The Otto had S22 skins and is the high-line schooner of the Behrlng Sea fleet. The other two had 520 and 549 skins, respectively. GRAIN FLEET 3IOVEMENTS. , Rourbalci and Mnrechal Davont Were Last October Ships. The last two ships of the October fleet to clear were the French barks Bourbak) and Marechal Davout. The Bourbakl wat dispatched by Glrvln & Eyre with 112,142 bushels of wheat, valued at 567,000, and the Mareehal Davout by Balfour, Guthrie ft Co. wifk 113J20 bushels of wheat, valued ct 9&1.S3S. Bath go to Quecnstown or KiU siauiJi for orders, Tho flrst November ship will be the Lady Isabella, which Is loading a mixed cargo of wheat and flour for the Cape of Good Hope. The big Ger man bark Henrlette, Just in from th Orient, left up from Astoria" yesterday and will reach port today., The County of Kinross and the Carlo P. arrived down yesterday. They had no delay la reaching Astoria, and -it is to be hoped will be no longer In going from Astoria to the sea than they were between Portland and Astoria. LAST NOME LINER. Roanoke Arrives With a Big: Crovrd From the North. PORT TOWNSEND, Wash., Oct. 3L The steamship Roanoke arrived this morning from Cape Nome, bringing' 600 passengers, 40 of whom landed here and will sail for San Francisco on the Uma tilla. The Roanoke Is the last of the Nome passenger fleet. She reports all shipping in the North practically at an end, and at Nome, St Michael and Dutch Harbor all of the small fleet of vessels has been hauled out of the water and placed in Winter quarters'. The Roanoke was the last steamer to leave St. Michael, and as she steamed out of the harbor in the night time, she was saluted by hundreds of sky rockets. The Newport was at Dutch Harbor on the 24th and was to sail that day for Puget Sound, via Ju neau. The schooner Nellie Thurston left there October 14 for Port Townsend. The revenue cutter Thesis will be the last boat to sail from Dutch Harbor and after her departure the North will be closed until Spring. The Roanoke experienced good weather during the entire voyage. Notice to Mariners. Notice is hereby given of the following changes in the aids to navigation In this district, which affect the List of Bea cons .and Buoys, Pacific Coast, 1901: Oregon Columbia River, ship channel across the bar, page 48. Inner buoy, a black and white perpendicularly-striped, first-class can. reported September 22, 1901, as having gone adrift, has been replaced in position Inside the bar.l Turning buoy, page 49. A black and white perpendicularly-striped, first-class can, is reported as having dragged from its position. It will be replaced as early as practicable to mark the turn in the channel to Fort Stevens wharf. Washington Wlllapa Bay, main chan nel across the bar, page 64. Inner buoy, a black and white, perpendicularly striped, first-class nun. Is reported Octo ber 24. 1901, as having gone adrift from its position inside the bar. It will bo replaced as early as practicable. t Entrance to Gray's Harbor, page 69. Trustee Spit buoy No. O, a red. first-class nun, reported adrift September 26, 1901. wa3 replaced la position off i the northerly edge of the spit Octqber 23, 1901. Point Brown Spit buoy No. 1, a black, first-class can, reported September 26, 1901, as having gone adrift, was found to be in position October 25, 1901. By order of the Lighthouse Board. W. P. DAY, Commander U. S. N., Lighthouse In spector. Office of Inspector Thirteenth Lighthouse district, Portland, Or., Oct. 31, 190L Aid to Nlsrht Nnvlprntlon. NEW YORK, Oct. 31. An Important patent connected with the St, Lawrence navigation has been issued and sub mitted to Mr. Tate, Minister of Public Wrorks, by whom It will be laid before the Cabinet, says an Ottawa special to the Times. The patent is designed to do away with the lighthouses, buoys and in fact the entire paraphernalia for night navigation botween Montreal and Quebec and substituting a submerged electrical system. The main idea is to sink an electric cable In the center of the navigable chan nels, with power transmitted from a power-house at Montreal, and lines of col ored lights at or above the water levc each side of the channel, the lights on one side being of different color from those on the other side. The lights will bo supported by cork supports. Gray's Harbor Marine Notes. ABERDEEN. Wash., Oct. 31. There are from 10 to 12 schooners In the harbor here which will take away from 7,000.000 to 8,000,000 feet of lumber. At the West & Slade mill thore are five ships being loaded for Philippine, Mexican and Ha waiian ports. The tug Fleetwood, which will cost about $6000, was launched Wednesday. She will be used for towing and passenger trade. A. J. West, who went East to purchase machinery for a new $100,000 mill, is ex pected home next week. The Nelson Bros, have placed a new run of boilers in their mill here. Parser Charged With Embezzlement. SEATTLE, Oct 31. W. B. Fielding, purser of the steamer Valencia, who ar rived In this city yesterday, a prisoner aboard that vessel, was arrested today on a warrant sworn out by J. M. Lane, mas ter of the steamer, charged with embez zling $540. He was placed under bonds of $1500. Fielding is HI, and will be sent to the hospital ward of the County Jail it he cannot furnish 'ball. The vessel came down carrying an excessive number or passengers, and a fine of $710 has been Imposed upon her by the customs Inspec tors. ' ICosmos Line Favored. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct 31. The Kos mos steamship line, of Hamburg, has contracted with the Mexican Government to establish regular connection between its Pacific Coast service and that cover ing Mediterranean ports. Under the contract with the Mexican Government the company will handle mall free and 10 tons of government freight on each of its vessels. In con sideration of this service the company will be exempted from 65 per cent of the tonnage dues. Schooners Driven Seaward. ST. JOHN'S, N. F Oct 31. Three schooners were driveu ashore on the Lab rador coast last week during a gale, but all on board were rescued. Two other vessels, one carrjing a Catholic priest, who had been making a sacerdotal' visi tation, were driven seaward, and have been missing for 10 days. The steamerw Glencoe wont in search o them, but with out result Twelve lives are Involved, and it is feared that all have perished. Montreal Tonnnge Increasing:. MONTREAL, Quebec, Oct. 31. In spite of the scarcity of freights and' the high Insurance rates, the tonnage of the port of Montreal Is nn ttar tncrnca tv. -toi tonnage tohe first of the present morfth' was 1.144. ompared with 1.0G0.2S4 for the same,! iqd last year. The steam- ship busi as been sustained bv a remarka passenger traffic, which has. In a ure, compensated for the loss or ab of freight Surey Vesel Return. SEATTLE? Oct 3L The Tlnitpfl StatPR Coast anc$jGcodetic Survey vessels Pat terson, CaStdln Pratt, and McArthur, Cap tain Dickens, arrived today from Icy Strait Sakjm Inland and Cross Sound, in the waters of which they operated the past season. The Gedney, another of the fleet, put "m at Port Townsend. Domestic and Foreign Port. ASTORIA, Oct 31. Arrived down at 11:20 A. M., British ship County of Kin ross. Left up at 1 P. m., German bark Henrlette. Arrived down at 3:20 P. M., Italian ship Carlo P. Condition of the bar at 4 P. M., rough; wind, southeast; weather, cloudy. San Francisco, Oct 31. Arrived Bark Kate Davenport, from Portland; steamer Jeanle, from Seattle: schooner Western Home, from Coos Bay; schooner Lily, from Umpqua. Sailed Steamer Ram csls, for Seattle. Honolulu-Sailed Oct 23-Schooner Spo- kane, for Port Gamble; schooner Robert Hind, for Port Townsend; steamer Moana. for Victoria; to sail Oct 29, ship Slrene, for Portland. San Pedro Arrived Oct 30 Schooner Lillebonne, from Gray's Harbor. San Francisco, Oct 3L Sailed Steamer t Pleiades, for Seattle; brig .Blakeley, tor Port Townsend. Shanghai Sailed Oct 30Yangtse, for Seattle, via Hiogo. Singapore Sailed Oct 30 Copack, from Liverpool, for Seattle. Cherbourg Sailed Oct 30 Columbia, from Hamburg and Southampton, for New York. Quecnstown, Oct 31. Sailed Oceanic, for. New York; Rhynland, for Philadel phia, both from Liverpool. New York, Oct 3L Sailed Deutsch land, lor Hamburg, via Plymouth: Bre men, for Bremen; Laurentian, for Glas gow; La Champagne, for Havre. Coronel, Oct 31. Arived Flintshire, from San Francisco, for Antwerp. Genoa, Oct 3L Arirved Lahn, from New York, via Naples. Gibraltar, Oct 3L Arrived Fuerst BIs mark, from New York, for Algiers, Na ples and Genoa. Alden Sailed Oct 29 Gaiso. from Ta coma, Hiogo, etc., for England. Tacoma, Oct 3L Sailed Schooner Lu zon, for Honolulu. Seattle, Oct. 31. Sailed Steamer Sena- 1901-2 GRAIN FLEET FROM PORTLAND. JULY. Wheat Sailing date, name, flag, rig, tons, master, destination, shipper bushels'. Value 12-Madagascar, Br. bark, 1996, U. i.. f. o.. P. F. M. Co....!?. 126.052 5 75 631 22 Pak Ling, Br. str., 2S75 Warrell. St. Vincents, f. o., Balfour 198 SG3 119318 30-Nal. Ger. bark. 2627, Schulte, U. K., f. a, Kerr.... uoi 59940 AUGUST. ' . ' C Argus. Br. ship 1513, Hunter, U. K., f. 0., Balfour 85 834 49574 18 Dumfriesshire, Br. bark, 24S3, Swinton, U. K., f. o., Eppinger.... 149,541 89725 SEPTEMBER. 3 Poltalloch, Br. bark, 2139, Young, U. K-, f. 0 P. F. M. Co 140 806 sawn 8-Brabloch, Br. ship. 2000. Hawkins, U. K., f. o., Glrvln 119375 75665 16-Galgate, Br. ship, 2227, Griffith, U. K.. f. o., McNear 131 033 wem 17 Hilston. Br. ship., 1998, Richards, U. K.., f, o.. Balfour 115 557 69334 23 Ecuador, Ger. bark, 2264, Dleckmann, TJ. K.. f. o.. Kerr . . 134546 7-ik 29 Sussex (A), Br. bark, 1212. Guthrie, U. K., f. o. Kerr .... ! 7 249 3ai4 30-GlamorEanshire (B); Br. str., 2S30, Davies, St Vincent, f. o. Ball ' four '. 96,376 56,521 OCTOBER. 4 Nantes, Fr. bark. 2029, Rlcordel, U. K., f. o., P. F. M. Co.. 115.X72 rsroo 7-Dunbritton, Br. bark, 1471, Tucker, U. K., f. 0.. Balfour.!.... 78 183 44365 11 Mabel Rlckmers, Ger. ship, 1895, Bandelln, Hamburg. Glrvln... 116167 69 70J 13-Falls of.Halladale (C), Br. ship, 1977, Fordyce, U. K.. f. o. McNear ' ' ' irtct mwa 13 Samoena, Br. ship, 1869. Boyce. U. K.. f. 0., Kerr ....".".'.'. 120164 fi4 s 15-Lonsdale, Br. ship. 16S5, Fraser. TJ. K.. f. o.. P. F. M. Co 101787 55d 17-East Indian. Br. bark 1003. Coath, U. K., f. o., P F7 M Co 105 600 59000 17-Glen turret, Br. str.. 3d26. Webster, St Vincent, 'f. o.. T3a four 21S 195 124 376 17-St Donatlen, Fr. bark, i259, Dejole, b. K.. f. 0., Port G Co 80 128 42500 26-Rcnee Rlckmers. Ger. ship, 1959, Schultze. U. K. f. 0., Glrvln 121250 72750 RIckmer Rlckmers. Ger. sriipl&29. Baake, U. K., f. o. Balfour mil I'll Favorita (D), Ger. bark, 1323, Thomann,U. K.. to Kerr jr"1U,35X 63'4a MaIie!d, Br. bark, 2176, Roberts, U. K., f, o., P. F. M Co 13l" 7?"m Carlo P. (E), It ship, 164L Polllo, U. K., f" o Balfour ' ' Aristea, Aus. str., 2208, Scoponich, St. Vincent, f. o. Kerr 16s'56 u"'i County of Kinross, Br. ship, 1613, Collins, U. Kl, f. Zyfr' 94"591 Werra. GeV.'bTrk,""857VBnnVngs''u.' K.',K' o.VKe'rr ". '.'.'. mm , S'SS Bourbakl Fr. bark, 1710, Largeout, U.K.. f. o.f Girvl '" n2lP! CT000 Maiechai Davout, Fr. bark. 1711, Grouhel, TJ. K. f. o. Ba four 113 220 ? Nelson, Br. ship., 1247, Perrlam, U. K.. t.' o , P? F. M .Co?"!: I." 63,'715 35700 A Also 78,472 bushels of barley, valued at $32,950 B Also 131.616 bushels of barley, valued at ?55 278 C Also 116,70Sbushels of barley, valued at $51 000: D 93,325 bushels of barley, valued at $38,070. E 112,187 bushels of barley, valued at J 17,119. SUM3IARY FOR OCTOBER. - , 1901 1900 ISM SffCL 5f.g SSSk iS! g 3& s& j.o aan JJTancisco 3,500 1,994 13,550 7,317 7,056 4,440 Total wheat 1,799,653 tt.018.9S6 1,304.787 5767,306 801.837 ?487435 To SSK and Africa Bbls' Value' BgXgW To Orient and Siberia 89,310 $ 247193 "52 000 sijffooii U7Qi ln'7& To San Francisco i5,Sfl 41,155 20695 SJ.'SO? 21927 li Total flour 105,139 ; 2S8.348 72,695 5199,807 106,469 5297360 Flour reduced to wheat measure.. 473.125 5 288,348 327?127 M99SOT toiYo w-fn Wheat as above 1,799,653 1,01S,9S6 1,301.787 767.306 80H 5 Grand total, wheat and flour.... 2,272,778 51.307,334 1,631,914 5967,113 1,230,947 5784 795 Barley . Bush. Value. Bush. Value Bush Vni'n. To Europe 322,220 5 136,195 105,620 5 36.210 219,741 5107,342 tor, for Skagway; steamer Umatilla, for San Francisco. Arrived Steamer Roan oke, from Nome; steamer City of Puebla, from San Francisco; United States steam ers McArthur and Patterson, from Ju neau. Flnnncc Romance of Egypt. North American Review. An element of romance attaches in most countries to the annals of national debts in respect of the struggles and vicissitudes to which they relate, but in Egypt a land where finance spells politics, the story of the public debt Is pre-eminently romantic. Recklessly and prodigally contracted, that debt has for years pressed with crushing severity upcm the docile Egyptian peas antry; but the astonishing feature of its history is that, in the end, out of evil came good. The public debt, with Its as sociations of grinding taxation and of the koorbash, was destined Itself to become the salvation of the fellaheen. Foreign In tervention In the Interest of the creditors brought with it the foreign control which has secured the Egyptian peasantry bet ter conditions of life than they have en joyed for centuries, possibly better condi tions for the mass of people than have ever been known on the Nile. Reform in Egypt grew out of the necessity of pro tecting the labor of the fellaheen and of faecuring them such Immunity from extor tion and maltreatment that the fruit of their toll would suffice to meet the obliga tions Imposed upon them without their knowledge and without their assent. And this proposition stands, although It is true that foreign intervention has bound the burden of debt tightly upon Egypt where as other countries, it is argued, If placed In similar circumstances, would have re pudiated their obligations and proceeded after long years of haggling to some il lusory compromise with an exhausted creditor. This was not possible in Egypt; the cause of the foreign creditors was es poused by the most powerful governments of the Old World, and the irresistible voice of Europe insisted on full measure being paid. How She Helped Hernclf. Academy. The woman sat with her back to the wall in the little French restaurant near Picadllly, and the man faced her on the opposite side of the table. They were French; they were obviously man and wife; and they had the appearance of be ing moderately prosperous. Yet there must have been some need of small economies, for, with the meal that was Just ended, they had divided between them a half bottle of ordinaire at 6d. The woman's glass was empty, the man's half full; and so they sat, not ready, to go, yet having no apparent reason for staying. They did not talk; they 6eemed to be considerably bored. The waiting at the little restau rant Is as bad as the food is good; two men cannot do the work of Ave, however willing they may be. I was patiently ex pecting the arrival of my fish, and, for lack of a better occupation, I watched these two who Interested one another so little. Chained to the leg of the table on the right of the man was a singularly naked black-and-tan toy terrier. It had been quiet to begin with, but at last It be came querulous and attracted my atten tion. Looking at the woman again, I ob served a curious change in her expres sion; it appeared that she had somehow recovered her interest In life. She said something to the man. who promptly bent down and patted the dog, as if to quiet It She instantly took his glass, emptied the contents into her own, and drank the wine at a gulp. When the man looked up again she was leaning back against the wall, listless, absent-minded, utterly bored. Jumped on a Ten-Penny Nnil. The little daughter of Mr. J. N. Powell Jumped on an Inverted rake made of ten p"fenny nails, and thrust one nail entirely through her foot, and. a second one half way through. Chamberlain's Pain Balm was promptly applied, and five minutes later the pain had disappeared .and no more a.uuerlng was experienced. In three days the child was wearing her shoe as usual, and with absolutely no discomfort Mr. Powell Is a well-known merchant of Forklnnd, Va, Pain Balm is an antiseptic, and heals such injuries without matura tion, and In one-third the time required by the usual treatment. For eote by all dructf-sts. iFREt DELIVERY OF MAIL SYSTEM IN OPERATION IN RURAL DISTRICTS. THE Growth of the Service Since Its In troduction In 180G- Snbject . , of Report. J The wide discussion now being had on the subject of rural free delivery makes of especial Interest at this time a report made on the subject by Mr. Charles H. Grcathduse of the Agricultural Depart ment to Secretary Wilson. 'The report is very exhaustive, and a part follows: The system of free delivery ot mall at the farm homestead Is developing, In the United States Ty great strides. The first routes bearing the name "rural free de livery" were established on October 1, 1896, at Halltown. Uvllla and Charlestown, W. Va. Others followed at once, and by the close of the fiscal year the experiment showed satisfactory results. There were 44 routes In the Fall of 1897; this number In creased to 128 In 189S, and on November 1, 1S99, had Jumped to 634. These radiated from 383 distributing points and served a population of 452.735 persons. On June 30 1900, a little more than six months later,' the number or routes had grown to 1214 for a population of 879.127, and In the next four months the system again more than doubled its proportion?, showing on No vember 1. 1900, 2551 routes for 1,801,524 per sons; and tltere were also at that date 2158 applications for the establishment of new routes. The whole of the United States Is now laid out In four divisions for ttie inauguration and maintenance of this ser vice, and the work Is going forward with steadily increasing volume. Important Advance. April 12, 1900, an Important advance took place. Rural carriers were authorized to receive and deliver registered mall. As the law requires such matter to be de livered personally,. the carriers are obliged to go to the houses Instead of dropping the letters or packages In the farm box. Rural carriers ore also authorized to r. ccipt for applications for money orders, and while they cannot yet issue the or ders, they can save the farmer the trip to the office by acting as his agent. Another most satisfactory change was made on July 26, 1900, when an order was made under which postage on drop letters on rural free-delivery routes was fixed at 2 cents per ounce and carriers were required to cancel stamps on all letters collected by them. This order carried with it authority to deliver drop letters without passing them through the ha"nds of a postmaster. Rural free delivery of malls is scientific. On purely theoretical grounds the pan office ought always to deliver the matter Intrusted to it at the door of the addres see. The distance to be traveled from sender to receiver of mall Is precisely the same whether the whole trip be made by the postal employe or he be met part way by the person for whom It is intended. Furthermore, tVc cost of making the trip s always paid out of the sum total of the nation's capacity to do work. It makes little difference ultimately whether the labor is paid for from government funds collected by the sale of stamps or otherwise, or is done by each man direct ly without intervention of the United States Treasury at all; It all comes from the people, anyhow. Only Q,nentlon Considered. The only question that need be asked Is whether there will be more waste of time, a larger number of empty trips by thb farmer, who never knows when there Is mail for him, or by the postman, who al ways knows whether there Is something to deliver; and to this there seems to be but one answer. The number of times tho farmer would be going to the post town for other reasons and the times when several families would send for mall4 by the same messenger enter Into the calcu lation, of course, but In general this would not change the answer. And whether the adressee may be a farmer or a townsman really Is of no consequence; if free deliv ery Involves only a short trip for the post man in the city, it also Involves only a short trip for the cltlren, and tho corre sponding relation between length of 'trips exists for the farm delivery. The opinions of special agents engaged In introducing free rural delivery In all parts of the United States, as shown In their reports In 1899 and 1900, are Invari ably favorable to "the success of the sys tem. All agree that the opposition comes only from persons Interested In the mall service who think they are likely to lose by tlK change, and from small storekeep ers and saloon-keepers at fourth-class postofflces. Some of them mention also as difficulties to be overcome the fact that the work had been generally spoken of as experimental, and the impossibility of serving all persons precisely alike. Rules Governing- Rural Delivery. In order to introduce rural free delivery on a new route, a petition must be circu lated and signed showing the desire of the persons along the line for the new service. This paper is then forwarded to the Rep resentative In Congress from the district in which the route will be located, or to one of the Senators from the state, for his recommendation. If It is deemed practicable to start the service as desired, a special agent of the Postofllce Depart ment Is sent to lay out a route and make a map of It His report and map must 1 show that at least 1 families can be made accessible to the delivery. It also shows the character of the roads, and the agent Impresses upon the persons Inter ested that the roads must be made pass able Summer and Winter. A full route Is considered 25 miles, but according to the country traversed may vary from 17 to 35 miles. It does not taTce the carreer over the same ground twice in the same day. Carriers were paid at first only 5150 a year. They now receive J500 for an ordl- 'nary route and for special short routes 5100 a year for each five miles traveled. They are bonded, and each carrier has a bonded substitute, so that the malls may never lack a responsible carrier. The civil service regulations have never been applied to this service, but good character and temperate habits are required. Women are acceptable, and a few are In the ranks, some of them considered very efficient. Reports to the Postofllce Department of dereliction of duty on tbe part of rural carriers are very few. DEFENSE OF THE TURKS. Mistake of Charging Them With Miss Stone's Abdnctlon. PORTLAND.' Oct."29! (To the Editor.) The Oregonlan of October-14 contained a synopsis of what Is supposed to have been a lecture, delivered at the First Chris tian Church", by a convert from Moham medanism, on the subject of the abduc tion of Mlsa Stone. This regenerated, justified and sanctified lecturer not only charged the Turkish Government with the crime which all the world knows to be absolutely false, but, ,In his most holy simplicity, proceeded to tell his audi, ence how "the Turks hate Christians with implacable hatred"; that "Turkey should be disciplined for her barbarous and mur derous treatment of Christians," finally supplementing his lecture with detailed accounts and "Incidents of massacres In Turkey as he saw them." That an apos tate from the religion of Islam should be little Inclined to speak well of those to which he formerly belonged Is but In ac cord with Neander's observation on apos tates In general, but that one shoula so deliberately slander the whole Turkish people Is certainly something that should not be allowed to pass unchallenged. As a matter of fact, the abduction ot Miss Stone is the work of Bulgarian bri gands, who, in religion, are of the Greek orthodox persuasion, ' and who, In con formity with the usages of that holy church, have undoubtedly crossed them selves three times before embarking In that enterprise, In order that the good Lord may bless and prosper their under taking. Much has been said about the massa cres in Turkish dominions, especially in tho Slavic provinces, and, strange as It may seem, even In this age people be lieve that the Turks are doing it all. To those, however, who have seen something of this world and who understand human actions It is well enough known that these periodical disorders and butcheries are manipulated and brought about by the roguery of statesman and cunning ot priests of their own persuasion In order to furnish the power that Is behind them, in its constant plotting against Turkey, with motives for Interference war and the mob In its folly believes anything and, on hand to engage in looting, Is as ready to fight anybody. In a general pandemo nium, such as often reigns among the brigands of the Slavic provinces, some Turks may become involved, but the srurklsh people as such have certainly nothing to do with these slaughters and disorders. But even if we should, for the sake of argument, concede that at some time some massacres were deliberately planned and executed by the Turkish peo ple these sink Into insignificance when compared with the religious massacres of which Christendom Is guilty, and which, according to Buckle's estimate, amounts to about 140,000,000 people, or one-tenth of the population of the globe, to say nothing of the dragonades, minor conflicts, secret murders, etc., etc. In a note to the 74th stanza, Canto 11, of Chllde Harold, written som 90 years ago, Byron, the King of English poets, thus speaks of the Turks: "There does not exist a more honor able, friendly and high-spirited character than the Turkish provincial Aga, or Mos lem country gentleman. . . . The lower orders are In as tolerable discipline as the rabble in countries with greater pre tensions. ... If it Is difficult to pro nounce what they are, we can at least say what they are not; they are not treacherous, they are not cowardly, they do not burn heretics, they are not as sassins, nor has an enemy advanced to their capital. They are faithful to their Sultan till he becomes unfit to govern, and devout to God without an Inquisition. Were they driven from St. Sophia tomor row and the French or the Russians en throned in their stead. It would become a question whether Europe would gain by the exchange. With regard to their ignor ance ... It may be doubted, always excepting France and England, In what useful points of knowledge they are ex celled by other nations. ... In all money transactions with the Moslems I ever found the strictest honor, the high est disinterestedness. In transacting busi ness with them, there are none of those dirty peculations, under the name of In terest, difference of exchange, commis sion, etc., etc., uniformly found in applying to a Greek Consul to cash bills, even on the first houses In Pera." No more need be quoted. Those last 90 years since Byron wrote these lines, rep resent possibly the highest progress made by tho civilized world, and yet, with the exception of the Anglo-Saxon race, who can this day furnish as good a certificate of character and from as excellent a source? Who can? As to the theology of the Turks? for all that I know It would seem no better and no worse than any of our systematic the ologies. But suppose it Is a cruel one; and their polygamy, let us assume, Is something so foreign to us who are known not to violate any of the commandments. Yet It would be well, before finding fault with the beliefs or unbeliefs of other peo ple, to look nearer home and see what 1 It that we have in our own systems or theologies and practices. Oft has my wondering mind been per plexed with the problem of intolerance, slander and hatred so generally and per sistently practiced by the civilized sub divisions of the human race against each other. I asked myself time and again, whence, by Allah, these cruelties whioh, like a blight, smite all that harmony, joy and peace every honest heart hungers for. The only conclusion I have reached Is that these puppets In the world's pup pet' show, by constantly slandering others, evidently believe that, by so doing, they successfully establish their own superior ity. Hence to Omar for consolation: Oh Thou, who man of baser Earth didst make, And ev'n with Paradise device the Snake: For air the Sin wherewith the Face of Man Is blacken d Man's forgiveness give and take! W. H. G. The Hnmlet of Edvrln Booth. Atlantic Monthly. Through his Hamlet Edwin Booth made, upon the wh'ole, his deepest and surest Impression. In his performance of the part there was retained to the last, con sciously and deliberately, more of the old fashioned formality and precision of style than he permitted himself In other Imper sonations, and the effect was sometimes that of artifice. But Mr. Booth elected to represent Hamlet in a style far less fa miliar and far more remote from ordinary life than he used for any other character in his large repertory. It was not that his Hamlet was all In one key; that its moods were many and diverse; that the actor did not finely discriminate between the son, the Prince, the courtier, the friend, the lover, the artist and the wit The contrary was true It was as full of dellrate and Just differences as one could wish. But, through its prevailing quality, made constantly prominent by the tragedian's methods, certain definite and necessary results were reached. Ham let differs from Shakespeare's other tragic heroes both In his supernatural experience COriMtMT HM IT TM rOCTM WUIIII CO. enOINNATI. HOW TO OME men economize so closely on the number of words in a telegram that the receiver can not understand it. This is not sensible economy. Neither is it sensible unanaaaMH economy to ruin garments of value with cheap soap or powerful chemicals that eat into the fabric True economy uses Ivory Soap in the laundry. It is the most of pure soap that can be sold for the money. Chemically it is as innocent as water. Yet it does everything you can ask of a soap. Try it I and in his unique spiritual constitution. . . . To Hamlet, by the conditions of his life and his soul, Is given the largest opportunity for choice and the smallest power of choosing. . . . After all, there is a fine fitness In that closeness of association between Edwin Booth and Hamlet the Dane, which Is to abide as long as the man and his art and his life are remembered. In his largeness and sweetness, his rare delicacy and sensi bility, he was nobly human to the core, after the pattern of the most human of all the creations of the poet. Like the melancholy Prince, he was required to drink the bitter water af affliction, and to hold his peace when his heart was almost breaking; and, In Its extraordinary depth and reserve, even as Hamlet's and as Milton's. Was like a star nnd dwelt apart The Paris Bourse. Forum. Except, perhaps, around the Casino at Monte Carlo, there Is no army of mone tary rates as large as that which prowls around the Paris Bourse. Few spectacles are more affecting than that of such men once, doubtless, prosperous In legitimate pursuits, with a healthful view of the world and possessing In full that Ines timable gift In life, le bonheur d'etre so shattered in character and degraded in morals; always mental and often physi cal wrecks; men with broken volition, with lost purpose, with professions they can no longer exercise; with strenuously acquired commercial experience which has been hopelessly vitiated by the terrible dissipation of thwarted speculation; men whose sole Idea and possession is a "sys tem" of playing the market which they themselves can never play like the Vleux professor at Monaco, who, moyennant une falble retribution, will cast you a beauti ful horoscope with his infallible diagrams and apparatus. Men but they are not men. They are ghosts pitiable, miserable apparitions who haunt the purlieus of the relentless, Inexorable monster that de stroyed them. These, with a few old women, are the dregs and lees of the Paris Bourse, and thpy are known as the pled humldes wet feet. The old women carry old hand bags, and In the old handbags are "se curities." The insecurities are as cheap and as degraded as the dealers In them the engravings Issued by Insolvent cor porations, by corrupt companies, by coun terfeit concerns that were never Intended to develop beyond their charter, and by South American mining companies that never yielded an ounce of, ore. Yet this worthless mass of paper finds a market occasionally. Sometimes a bank or cog nate institution falls. Among Its assets are found the contents of the old hand bags. Usually these were bought not long before the failure. The failure Is not ex plained by the contents; the contents are explained by the failure. Probing deep er, we discover that the officers have speculated, not In handbag rubbish, but in the officially listed securities, and, when bankruptcy was inevitable, purchased the refuse to "give themselves a counte- AT THE HOTELS. THE PORTLAND. John McNaught. N Y G P Baldwin, Seattle F B Upham & wife, Sidney, Wash John Klnzel. USA C F Fisher & wf. S F G S Whltson. N Y F L Whltson. N Y Louis Glass, San Fr J Lawrence, San Fr Chas T Krellng.Dawsn W McMullen. Boston W F Dawson. Seattle IW A Schrock. wf & enna, ban Francisco E S Holmes & wife. Washington. D C Y S Williams, Mlnnpla Sam E Rork. N Y Mrs Charles J Wlnton, wis B Goodman, Phlla W H Daniels. Chicago Go C Carson, Reddlnj i.ewis Hau. weiser Alex Cohn, San Fran J C Macdonald, Denver F C Dlven, Seattle CaHln Whitney. Ohio Geo P Taylor, Nome R L Eaton. do Mrs G P Taylor, do Miss W Smith. do J A velten. Milwaukee W B Lomax, Dawson T J Donohue & w, Ta coma O F Wentworth, do R T Bretz, Seattle C H Hill. Beloit. Wis L K G Smith, city A E Rice, Centralla C X Crewdson, Chicago O Metcalf, Jr, Chicago A H Hart, N Y N SchafCner, Cleveland C G Simpson. N Y G F Ereen. Tacoma Mrs R L Eaton, Nome Prof Schredfoeger, do Capt Simmons. Nome Miss Frances Law, NY H M Brlgham, Boston John Marshall Brown & wf, Portland. Mo Miss Brown, do F W Teeple, Chicago W H Jackson, Detroit Chas Kemper, Boston W L-Haa. N Y F W Jakcson IF S John30n, Newport Mien THE PERKINS. F A Roney. Nomo C M Vassar, Pomeroy J I Kimball. HubbardMrs C M Vassar, do L M McDanlels. N Y E T Inglls, Sacmnto Frank Saycr, Moro. Or A P "Wallace, Pe-EU H J Russell. San Fr D D Wilder. Dalles Geo R Bennett. Denver J W Boone. Prlnevllle John Porter, SUverton J R Upson, St Paul Geo Hays, Eugene Geo T Marklson, Chgo P Gllmore, Astoria G S Brlgham, Major, U S A Mrs Adams, Cased Lks J H Porter, SUverton u u Ames, st Louis W B Wyrlck. lone. OrJ B KUslng. San Fran Chai L Campbell, The Dalles J P Wilcox. Grass Vy Albert C Collins. S F Percy R Kelly, Albany Edgar B Piper, city Mrs E B Flper. city M G Flynn. Philomath Geo.H Rundy, S F D W Cade. St Joseph D N Kitchen. N Y H M Brace. San Fran R M Berry, Hood R Master Berry, Hood R Eugene France, Aber deen, Wah S M Carter. San Fran A Livingston. Ashla'nd G "W McCoy, Dunsmulr, (,'ai J H Beckley. Eugene A A Whlppen. Janes- vllle. Wis A M Edwards. Seattle B Blsslngcr. Seattle Mrs L A Mitchell. Knappa, Or Mrs W J Ross, do B R Gray. South Bend Mrs H Syrenson, As torla W R Beckwlth. Ilwa-o CASTOR 1 A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature gf VM&C Cj ECONOMIZE. W Watklns, Artorla (L Simpson, N Y J M Eddy. Eugene John Beaty, Chicago E B Merchant. McMInlH G Whitney. Lwlstn H A Reynolds, do Chas Bray, Chicago Sam R Stott. SumpterlP N Severson, city F Forest. Sumpter E S Johnston. Pendletn E Todd. Sumpter Mra E S Johnston, do M M Nye. Wlllows.CaliC W Rldgway. do J A Ebbert, Eugene Mrs C W Rldgway, do D C Lezler. ArllngtonfC V Hale. San Fran Mrs D C Lealer, do IC W Smith. Tacoma Geo V Boise. Oakland. Mrs C W Smith, do Cal v s Cone, Tillamook THE IMPERIAL. C w. Knowles. Manager. F Forest, city E Todd, city G Henderson. Astoria Mrs Henderson, do D M Smith. Vanoouvr Wm Crooks. St Pi.Mln C S Brown. Astoria Mrs Brown. Astoria H M Teyscr, San Fr Mrs II X Babb. city A H Bowman. Nome V D Bradford. Hlllsbro Mrs Mlssllrh, Tacoma G W Emerson. Phlla JElma. Bradford, do Ucster Hradioru, do J B Keeper, Chicago Rev M J Kelly. Hernnr Mrs J F Cropp. W W Miss Lulu Huntgatc.do J T McJunkln. Hanfrd Mrs McJunkln. do I L Patterson. Salem F C Veal. Albany T E Caufleld. Salem Mr S B Eakln. Eugene H J Haynes. Chicago F C Rehm, Detroit F J Parker. Walla W A S Bennett. Dalles J S Williamson, Prlne- R C Chlpane. Omaha vllle U D Garland. St Paul Ruth Garner. Astoria. Mrs J H Smith, do Miss Maud Estes. BakC Mrs G W Lounsbury, Astoria W Atly, San Francisco Mrs W P Conway, In dependence Miss Lillian Conway, Independence Alex Renz. San Fran C Boyer, Woodland Mrs Boyer. Woodland THE ST. I L Kimball. Nome J W Parker, Nome J Brown. San Fran H Eystcr, New York A S Thomas. Mist M F Burton. Orient CHARLES. C Vanatta & w, Vancvi Myrtle Gregory, do C D Titus. Bea-.ertoc C L Wiggins, Salem Fritz Johanson. Chi nook Airs AY" Cochran, city Chas Hunter. Westport A B MUlsap. St Fnui L T Howard & wife, Roseburg A J Howell. Roseburg H C Schneider. Staytn Fred Foster, Albany J E Adams. Goldcndal J Bneon. Chinook J A McClun. Lebanon A Anderson, Qulncy S Wright & wf. do A C Her. Buttevllle R V Parrott do H G Allen. Oregon Cy Wallace Manary Miss Cochran. Mo Ole Relnseth. Astoria J D Vincent. Seattle V L Wllley. Shelton D Bartlow. Rainier L F Lane, Rainier O C Hlatt. wf & dtr N Merrill. Clatskanle W C Moorehouse.Waseo Geo A Hall. St Helens Charles Larson, do J Brown. Oregon City A C Brown. Salt X.ak H Orllng. city Hotel Drnnnvrlck. Seattle. European, first-class. Hates. 50c to 51.58. One block from depot .Restaurants near by. Tncomn Hotel. Tncomn. American plan. Hates. J3 and up. Donnelly Hotel. 'Tacoma. European plan. Rates 50c and up. Every woman in the country ought to know about Those who do know about it wonder how they ever got along without it It has robbed child birth o its terrors for many a young wife. It has preserved her girlish figure and saved her much suffering. It is an external lini ment and carries with it therefore, absolutely no danger of upsetting the system as drugs taken intern ally are apt to do. It is to be rubbed into the abdomen to soften and strengthen the muscles which are to bear the strain. This means much less pain. It also prevents morning sickness and all of the other discomforts of pregnancy. i druggist of Macon, Ga., says: " I have sold a large quantity of Mother's Friend and have never known an instance where it has failed to produce the good results claimed for it." A prominent lady of Lam berton. Ark., writes: " With my first six children I was in labor from 24 to 30 hours. After using Mother's Friend, my seventh was born in 4 hours." Get Mother' Priend at the drcur store, 81.00 er bottle. THE BRADFlEtD REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA, GA. Writ lor Ur freo Illn.trnte 1 book, "BITOBE BABT IS B0H5." Get What You Ask For! When you ask for Cascarets Candy Cathartic be sure you get them. Genuine tablets stamped C. C. C. Never sold in bulk. A substitutor is always a cheat and a fraud. Beware 1 All druggists, ioc NTAL-M1DY 3 Thesotiny Capjulea are superforj to Daisam or Vopaioa, -n CufacbsorlnjectionsandlluIDlfj, CURE IN 4S HOURSVLJ1 the same diseases without) inconvenience. Sold by all druggiits.