"P THE ' SUNDAY OREGGNIAK PORTLAD, MAY 13, 1900. n ' UNSAFE ALASKA SHIPS STEPS BEIXG TAKEK TO PROTECT THE UNDERWRITERS. A Bre OverleadeA Witi Livestock: at Seattle Har Be PxeveHted Frsa Leaving the Psrt. TACOMA, Wafib., May 12. So many thoroughly unseaworthy hulks have been pressed into the Nome service that the marine underwriters liave been" appealed to to prevent some of the so-called ships from proceeding to sea. The latest case "a that of the barge Skookum, loaded down to the guards with a cargo of merchan dise and livestock. The latter, several hundred head, will suffer untold torture In the cramped quarters assigned them, which they must endure for weeks before they can possibly be landed at Nome, and It is a question if any of the dumb brutC3 will survive the voyage. Captain Pope. Llpyd's representative of the Northern district, has this to say: "Those craft which come immediately under the supervision of the Inspectors of hulls and boilers, I am not prepared to criticise, because these gentlemen un derstand their business and know what they are about, but there are numerous vessels that do not come under their su pervision, and on these the overloading takes place. I think the underwriters are as much to blame as the owners and charterers of these craft; greed In both cases is at the bottom of the trouble. The shipping laws are also at fault; we have no equivalent body to the British Board of Trade. If we had, such a flagrant case as the barge Skookum would be very quickly settled. I consider this case one of the worst I have ever seen, as regardi overloading and general insecurity. Many human lives are at stake; besides, there are a number of dumb animals on board. For the human gold-hunter we may have less pity than for the dumb brutes which are led against their will to an almost certain death. I trust that the body of men who are to pass on the seaworthi ness of this excuse for a seagoing craft will have the good sense to condemn her, and If they do, they should be hon ored for having done the publio a service." Question as to Bsrge Slceelram. SEATTLE, May 12. There is a possibil ity that the big barge Skookum, now in this harbor loaded with 7000 tons of cargo for Nome, will not be towed north. Own ers of freight yesterday complained that she was overloaded and a marine survey was made. NAVIGATION OF THE YUKON. Now Open From Lebargre to Davrsea Cheap Hates to Nome. VICTORIA. B. C, May 12. The steamer Amur arrived this afternoon from Skag way. She brings news that the Yukon River opened up at Iawson on the morn ing of the 8th, and steamers are now running regularly from Iebarge through. Preparations are being made by several of the small owners outside of the com bination to carry passengers from Bennett to Nome at $75, and the Skagway Alaskan announces that the Klondike Corporation (Limited), the Flora, Nora and Bora, will adopt -the low rate and give battle to the opposition pool. The Democrats of Skagway have issued a call for a nominating f rimary. May 2L preparatory for the Juneau convention one week later. The AUIe A. Alger, one of eight schoon ers returning to port this morning, brings news that Mate Glllad, two white ..men and two Indians of the schooner Sadie Turpel were lost from, that vessel on the 19th of April, and 10 days later had not been heard from. There is a possibility that they have been picked up by some other vessel of the fleet, but It is more probable that all have been drowned, as very heavy weather prevailed at the" time. The flagship "Warsplte returned this afternoon from South American ports. Alaska Rates In Jeopardy- VANCOUVER. B. a. May 12. It is re ported that American steamers running from Puget Sound to Alaska will inaugu. rate a rate war against Vancouver com panies. If the latter persist in the recent rate-cutting business. A meeting of the Alaska Steamship Agents Association was held here on Friday night, when Americans volunteered to stop calling at Vancouver If Canadians would maintain rates. No satisfactory conclusion was ar rived at. THREATEXED BODILY IXJOTtY. Brass Band Carnival at Hillaboro Washington County JV'otes. HILLSBORO, Or.. May 12. Charles De laney, of Sherwood, was last evening placed In the County Jail, In default of $1330 bonds, to appear before the next term of Circuit Court, to answer to the charge of having threatened to do bodily Injury to one Gardner, a Sherwood saloon keeper. Delaney Is also charged with threatening to commit arson. The bands of "Washington County met In this city this evening and rendered a public programme. Hillsboro, Forest Grove, Farmlngton, Sherwood. Bethany and "Verboort were represented, and over 50 musicians assisted la the concert. Charles E. York, president of the Oregon State Band Association, was present. After the exercises were concluded the musicians were tendered a banquet in "Wehifunc 'Hall. It' Is intended to have all the county banSS join the state organiza tion, which, through the efforts of Presi dent "W. H. "Wehrung, president of the State Boards of Agriculture, will be the musical attraction at the state fair at Salem this Fall. Georgia Bash has filed suit for divorce against Frank Bash, for cruel and Inhu man treatment. She also names a co respondent In the person of one Maud Albright. The Anna C. Hatch Inquest case at For est Grove has "been passed upon by the County Court. The coroner's transcript called for a total of $274, but the expenses were audited at $155. It Is Intended that this expense shall be borne by the estate of the dead woman. The Sheriff last year collected taxes on 927 bicycles. So far this year there have been but 241 receipts Issued. It is esti mated that there are qver 1000 wheels In the county. Sheriff Bradford reports a collection of about $37,000 on the 1S99 assessment roll. Hon. S C. Spencer, of Portland, ad dressed an audience In the Courthouse last evening, under the auspices of the Republican committee. As there were several other attractions In the city, the attendance was not overly large. Rev. Evan P. Hughes, the Congrega. tlonal minister who was yesterday ren dered unconscious by a fall from a bi cycle. Is much improved. The County Court has authorized the Bicycle Commission to make the follow ing expenditures: Scholls path, $23: Cres cent. $13; Hillsboro. $3S; Verboort, $21; Ti gardvllle. $12. EARLY STRAWBERRY SHIPMENTS. Hood River Nearly Three "Weeks Earlier Than Last Seasoa. Hood River Glacier. S. C. Zelgler. of "White Salmon, brought In the first strawberries for shipment of the crop of 1900. He brought over six boxes of his own and two for his neigh bors, last Tuesday May 4, and -they were bought by the Davidson Fruit Company for 50 cents a pourd box. Mr. Zelgler has snipped first strawberries for five years ever since he has been on his place- at White Salmon. The first year the neigh bors saia his having first berries was an accident, but the "accident" happens right along every -year. The six boxes of Mr. Ziegler .were, very fine. N. C. Evans shipped half a crate of strawberries from his place oa Hood River on Sunday, May 6, IS days ahead of his first shipment last year. This is not the .first shipment from Hood River but this is the first half crate shipped. Hood River this time is even with "White Salmon. 1n early, berries. E. E. Savage has been experimenting with different varieties of strawberries. He reports the Bismarck, which does well in the East, as being of Inferior quality here, ill-shaped and inclined to fall down. The Magoon, on clay land, is very pro ductive, large, of good quality and last season stood shipment as well as the Clark seedling, and sold well in the Eastern markets. This season he has set some "Windsor Chief plants, the variety that does best in Sarcoxle, Mo., and Ar kansas points. This berry must be pollen Ized by some other, the Captain Jack be ing used for this purpose, one row In five being the customary method of set ting. G. D. Woodworth is also trying the "Windsor Chief. Mr. Savage Is also setting a few "Jersey Market" plants, a variety that Is popular in New Tork City markets. WATER FAMINE AT OREGON CITY. Reservoir Sapply Exhausted Before PHmplHg Station Is Repaired. OREGON CITY, Or., May 12. Oregon City is experiencing a water famine. Thursday & shaft attached to the power- j wheel of the pump broke, and was taken to Portland for repairs. It was then be lieved that the reserve supply of water In the reservoir at Ely, -which holds 1,600, 000 gallons, would last until the repairs were completed. Last night there was a depth of four feet of water in the reser voir. This morning the faucets failed to vlrfd wn.tr. nnd nimn Yrunlnjitlrn th Jf. GZAY'S bay. T&rr- reservoir was found to be empty. People "uudio, as its snort slopes ana extensive were compelled to carry water from wells "deland area would seem to prove. In before breakfast could be prepared, and tock- though beyond the head of naviga thls condition of affairs will continue at, lon' "? mainstream, a very small creek, least until tomorrow night The wheel1 ows dowJ dPea J"?15 dlJde and shaft were returned from Portland t between the Columbia and Wlllapa Bay. this afternoon, but It is quite an under-. Mn?tl?crJma11 stre?In8. fl0Tr ,dowJnto taking to replace them In the proper po- ttdal ary. and the watershed, a sltion verY narrow one, is well irrigated. Reclamation of the tldelands by diking , . - , and clearing up the slopes of Its brush D. P. J. Davis and Mrs. "William Van- woul(1 make ft flne j sp0t ot tmS laar were arraigned before Justice "Web-! rcglon far more valuable than it was ster today and the hearing was postponed wben covered, with the giant forests of until Monday. Davis was returned to the tj,e Columbia. Quite a number of modern County Jail, but Mrs. Vanlaar was released houses, with green meadows, are already on her own recognizance. Last night Van-. found there, and there are six school dls- laar came here and left his 8-year-old trlcts, with substantial school buildings. In daughter with her mother overnight. This the basin of Deep River, though some of morning he Tepeatedly urged his wife to their patrons live over the divide on the return home with him, promising to for-. Nasel River. Still no hint of the existence get and forgave every wrong, but she' stubbornly refused to accept his offer. Later "Vanlaar offered to pay the woman's fare if she would return to the home of Tier parents, near Sherwood, "Washington County, but she still remained obstinate. Vanlaar returned, home this evening, ac companied by his little daughter. Davis has agreed to pay the woman's board here. Residents of the "Vanlaar neighborhood state that the wronged husband is Indus trious and is fairly prosperous. BlgT Gnns to Be Fired. Port Towneend Leader. In a few days the people of Port Town send will be given a chance to hear the report of the two big guns at Fort Flag ler. The occasion for the testing of these guns Is on account of the report epread broadcast that they had received serious injury from the effects of fire. It will be remembered that while they were on the beach the crlbblngj oa which they rested caught fire from aSburning drift and the guns were slightly jfecorched. At the time an examination was made, and It was stated that they had received no In Jury beyond the melting of the coating of tar, and the guns were mounted. Since that time various reportfl have reached the department relative to these guns, and these reports have been of such a conflicting nature that the department has decided that a test be made to ascertain the real facte. They are 12-inch guns, and each will require a charge of 600 pounds of powder, and the projectile will weigh 1000 pounds. Three shots will be fired out of each gun, and it is not known in what direction the big projectiles will be hurled, but it is presumed they will be fired toward "Whidby Island. These guns will throw a projectile a distance of between 12 and 14 miles, and It would not be safe to fire them down the Straits, on account of incoming vessels, while the shore lino of "Whidby Island would, stop their course. The Coroner In Rebuttal. FOREST GROVE, Or., May 12. To the Editor.) May I suggest to those who have !!rES?iir5rK!i? the testimony of all the witnesses who appearea Deiore ine jury was tiuten down by a shorthand reporter, has been put in typewritten form and as a public record on file in the County Clerk's office, is now accessible to any one who cares to ex amine it? The physicians' reports of their autopsy and all other papers relating to the case are in the same file, fording opportunity to judge whether the Jury's findings were Justified by the Information before them. Under our present system, the District Attorney takes the place of grand Jury, and as the deputy for" this county m present with the Coroner's jury, he will h.TSWJffiJS warrant him in filing an indictment charg . .., . .. ..--. -. ..- ing murder, as your Oregon City letter writer of yesterday seems to believe. C L. LARGE. Held to Circuit Court. CORVALLIS. Or.. May 12. Henry Kub 11. captured yesterday by officers near Salem, while running away with a team and hack belonging to Mrs. S. A. Cooper, had a preliminary examination before Justice Holgate this morning. In the romnlnlrit tho TnkliiA of tVi -Stolon Tiron. erty was placed at $225. The defendant I waived examination, and is now In the county Jail, in default of $300 bonds. Kubli is a stranger in this section. He makes the fourth prisoner now held in the Benton County Jail two for the Ben ton, and two for the' Lincoln County Grand Jury. ( Reonevelt Will Not Retire. NEW YORK. May 12. Senator Piatt, upon his arrival in this city from Wash ington, was asked: "Do the Washington rumors about Gov ernor Roosevelt mean that he would be willing to retire from the Governorship now in order to become Governor-General of the Phllipplnesr "Not at all." replied Senator Piatt. "Governor Roossvelt Is going to fill out this term and another one." SYSTEM OF LOG STREAMS CENTER AT DEEP RIVER, WAH- KIAKUX COUNTY, "WASH. Coamtrr Valuable for Affrlcaltare Whea Timber Is Goae Prosper ous Fiaa Settlement There. ASTORIA, Or.. May 9. On the north side of the Columbia, opposite Astoria, there is much activity in "the logging busi ness, with three important logging rail roads in operation. Most of the timber on Deep River has been logged already, and the hlljs of that interesting- region are almost bare of green trees, except far up the summits. It has been a great lumber supply station for many years, and Old Tom Foss, the- logger, has cut many millions of feet of logs from the adjacent bills. Deep River affords very fine log boom sites on its quiet, smooth, wide and deep bosom, easily accessible to the lum ber market. Even with its hPls bare of trees, the logs cut on streams flowing into Baker's Bay are required to. be towed around t6 Deep River for safety of de- livery during all seasons and times, to sawmill buyers. The name of peep uver is well chosen. It is DO to 30 fathoms in depth after getting over the bar at Its mouth. The river proper is a tidal estuary, and Is some seven miles long, "with many windings, through lo and broken ranges of hills. Some assert that this river la . purely a tidal estuary without any water- shed a mere part of tho bed of too Co- of this human hive Is had from the Col uumbla at the mouth of the little river. Most of the travel, X' echool as well as among the neighbors. Is by row and- sail boats, and by the triweekly Astoria mall steamer. Within a mile of the head of navigation a county bridge has been built across Deep Rlver. It has a peculiar automatic draw bridge that requires no keeper. It operates by gravity. The draw is divided Into two parts, at the center, with hinges and rollers. A chain attachment enables the steamboatman to raise the parts of the bridge and thus pass through. The bridge draw is so nicely balanced as to permit the land traveler to restore the bridge to its status as a highway, without any trouble. A number of those cheap and economical drawbridges are in operation In the counties of "Wash ington bordering on tho Columbia. Ore gon might take a lesson in economy by studying the same plan. At the bridge William Anderson has established a sob stantlal store and warehouse and controls the entire" trade of that region, carrying on a very prosperous business. Recently Benson, the Oak Point logger, has begun surveying for a loggings road from the neighborhood of Anderson's store. He proposes to clean up the timber on the higher slopes of Deep River, and to get over by a pass on to Salmon Creek, which heads away up behind Skamokawa, In the Coast Range, along with Gray's River, Into which stream Salmon Creek empties near the mouth of the former. Olsen Is in with Benson on the timber deal, and It Is said they have gotten control of a situa tion that will keep them supplied with logs for 25 years. Fine Asrlcnltraal District. Deep River empties Into Gray's Bay, into which, and near together, also empty three other Important streams, all of which are great logging waters. The divides between them aro low, and some day the basins of these four streams, reaching from Harrington's Point, above Crooked Creek, to Rocky Point, below Sis son's Creek, and constituting really a con tinuous valley, will be cleared oft to tho highest summits, and will furnish some very fine agricultural land, when, if ever. J fumigh marKeu slsson's Creek, west and parallel with Deep River, has only two settlers on it. Brix Bros., of Astoria. have a logging outfit and a logging rail road up that stream. There Is a vast forest of spruce and fir timber on tho watershed of that creek, and reachlnc back some 12 miles to the summit of the dUide Columbia and Shoal ' -..- ,. win,, u rk-.i.-i. " . water, or Wlllapa, Bay. One-half of it is owned .by miscellaneous persons, and with these Brix Bros, can make their own terms. The other half of the timber fV.V rtl.eV -ptrMr t Mi.m4 -- t. lwwrhaJiwftl)fflka.yDtete.ifhIcii tatel purchased Urnbr laaJ-oC , e Northern.Paclflc in Washington and Idah6. -i-rrpniv--ifmr Tr.nne ncn ttii fir-m - 1 running a local sawmill in Rock Island, BL, of about 30,000 feet dally capacity. Twelve years ago the Weyerhausers were tho lumber kings of the Mississippi Val ley, and rated by Dunn's at $30,003.00). Their purchase of the 6.000.000 acres ot timber land In Washington and Idaho for S3.O0O.O0O was not only the biggest timber deal ever made, but It established that great firm as the lumber kings -of tho Pa. clfic Northwest. Brix Bros, get their logs from Slsson Creek for the general market. On Gray's River Saldren & Irving have a logging railroad and are getting out a large sup ply of logs, mostly for the Columbia mills at Knapptorf. The Umber supply of this watershep Is Immense, and almost virgin. Yet the cultivated farms in the valley of Gray's River are almost the most lovely to be found west of the Coast Range., It Is several miles, however, from the mouth of tho r'ver up to the region where these fine farms are found. All the lands on the lower part of Gray's River are tldelands and need to be diked before they can be cultivated. There are two fine fal!s on this river, near together, and about SO feet in height. They have a greater volume of water than the 60-foot falls on Young's River, south of Astoria. Crooked Creek is also an important Tog- ring stream, that empties Into Gray's Bay jnear .the mouth of Gray's River. Its watershed is shorter and is adjacent to the ROHD WHGO N S RUNHBOUTS Buggies, $60 and Up - . , Surreys, Traps, 5tanhopes alj kinds of vehicles, with steel tiFes, rubber tires, pneumatic tires. Harness, Whips and Robes. Farm, Spring, Delivery and Express Waflons of the Mitchell make Impossible to build anything better. Mitchell, Lewis & Staver Co. high slopes north of Harrington's Point. ; No Important loggings camps, with log ging railroads, are found on this stream; but It will not bo long neglected. In the face of ths great heglra of Eastern lum bermen to the Lower Columbia. These four waterways constitute one system. They all cluster around the site of the City of Frankfort, which bad a meteoric career as a boom city some 10 years ago, when Chenault, Mullinlz, Gray, Bourne and others essayed the rolo of town-builders. It Is, no doubt, the best site for a north-side city, and It Is likely the O. R. & N will make it the mooting place of Its railroad and river line from Portland to the North Beach resorts. It Is the best-sheltered, most-level and most accessible site on that side from Har rington's Point to Fort Canby. "With great development at the mouth of the Columbia it will become en Important town, by reason of its fine farming area, as well as for other advantages. The Deep River country is mostly set tled up by Finns a God-fearing, peace able. Industrious and Intelligent people, who have been trained in the' ways of self government. Thoy believe In good schools and churches, and are, perhaps, the best citizens among tho Scandinavian race, to which most Finns belong. Acquaintance with their ways, their modes of thought and their rules of action, will dissipate a prejudice that somehow exists In certain quarters, .against this interesting people. Among their school teachers, on Deep River, is a very brignt daughter of T. Patterson, the retired rest estate dealer of Portland. She has a school of some JnSJ'StnSi? SJSrSr? ifvearsf ! quite dignlfled; albeit only 18 years of age. The school directors of that district have a high flagpole 4n the schoolhouse yard, and the Stars and Stripes always float at its top. STARTED FOR VANCOUVER. Three Companies bf Seventh In fantry Will Arrive This Week. VANCOUVER BARRACKS, "Wash.. May 12. Captain McCain, acting Assistant Adjutant-General, has been notified that the three companies of the Seventh In fantry which are under orders to take sta tion at this post; left Fort "Wayne, Mich igan, yesterday afternoon. The troops will go by. steamer to a 'point at the head of Lake Superior and from there take the Northern Pacific to Portland, probably ar riving here next Tuesday or "Wednesday. First Lieutenant Daniel F. Keller, Twenty-fourth Infantry, has been designated as census enumerator at Fort Sherman, Ida ho. Private Toney Young, Company D, Twenty-fourth Infantry, was tried by n general court-mvtlol and found guilty of conduct to the prejudice of 'good order and military discipline, and was sentenced to be confined at hard labor for six months and to forfeit $10 per month for the same period. FIRE BUGS IN STJMPTER. Second Attempt to Barn the Town Frustrated Watch Set. STJMPTER, May 12. Fire bugs made en other attempt to burn Sumpter this morn ing. The fire was started In a pile of rubbish In the rear of the Kentucky liquor store on Granite Street and On the oppo site side from where the conflagration last night was. It was discovered in time and put out before gaining headway. Watch men were posted In different parts of the town tonight to guard against the In cendiaries. FUTURE VOTERS REGI5TERED,- The Practice in Linn Connty Large Number on the List. ALBANY. May 12. Tho County Clerk Is registering all who will be eligible to vote at the time of tho elections in June and November, in each case vnaking a note of the fact and of the election at which the voter will be eligible. About 20 of this character have so far been registered The registration tonight exceeds the vote of two years ago by about 500. Lively Enough for a City. Hood River Glacier. A regular chapter of accidents hap pened In Hood River and vicinity last week. Among those reported were the fatal accident to Charles Groat, who was killed while blasting stumps; William Thompson's runaway in which he lost an ear (but It was replaced by the doctor) j and was nearly scalped; the accident on the Haynes Hill, in which Charley Wal lace had an arm and several; ribs broken, and William Ellis escaped with serious bruises In a runaway; the accident to Charley Rathbone,-who was helping to unload a car of lumber, when a skid board tipped up and struck him In the face, breaking his nose and cutting a gash above the eye, and the runaway accident at Vlento, In which S. W. Curran suf fered a broken -leg. In an epidemic of accidents like that of last week doctors and undertakers may be happy, but timid people feel like going home and crawling under the bed. Birds Are Poisoned Pendleton Tribune. The meadow larks and small gray birds, once so numerous in the wheat belt of this county are by degrees being exter minated, says T. S. Hurlburt, of Echo. Their destruction Is being brought about by the promiscuous use of stryhnine soaked wheat by the farmers t6 rid them selves of the squirrels. As a result of the destruction of these small birds, Mr. Hurlburt has observed that troublesome Insects and files have correspondingly In creased, greatly to the annoyance and discomfort of man and beast, and to the injury of fruit trees. FIRST AND TAYLOR STREETS THE CONTRACTS AWARDED MOST O BOOKS P WASHINGTON'S TEXT TO BE MADE AT HOME. Tkwo Atraraed to Eastera Eouei "Will Be Maamfactarea fey Tteloa Laborers The Books. OLYXPIA. May 12. The fight between I the local and Eastern publishers as to i whlch should supply the textbooks for j Bona examination and experience. The "Washington has resulted In a victory for private, detectives employed by him to pl the former ani the union men. The State 1 ot hlm to aiarenutable resorts had no Board of Education adjourned this after- noon, after awarding the contract for the bulk of the books- to the "Westland Pub lishing Company, of this state. The concern has secured enough work to keep it running full time from now to the opening of the school year in Sep tember. The series of readers go to East ern men, but as they are to be brought out by union labor, the local people feel that they have not suffered defeat In this. The St. John system of penmanship was adopted. The Eastern houses have secured the primary arithmetic, school grammar, lan guage books and readers, primary history and the primary writing-books. The "West- land Publishing Company will furnish the etboo induct ? T3ES Wstm. ,',, mtmntr -. r. t, -vtt. , - hB,Mn, r, ,r,,v The high-school textbooks are as fol lows: Herrick's and Damon's rhetoric, Skin ner's studies in Latin, Carr's physical geography, "White's algebra, "Wells' geom etry, Adams' European history, McLaugh lin's United States history, FIske's physics, Caller and Daniel's first book in. Latin, Greenough's second year in Latin, and Al len and Greenough's Cicero. The textbooks In "German and French were readopted. No high school arithmetic has been chosen yet. Professor "W. T. Hughes, principal of the public schools of Falrhaven, compiled the speller. The St. John system of pen manship was devised by Professor St. John, a professor in the State "University, and his system is tne vertical system taught by use of a diagram. Horatio Ailing, chief clerk in the State'Secretary's department, is the author of a work on civics, to be used in the eighth-grade classes. The history, geography, and grammar have not been written In the state, but the plates have been purchased by the "Westland Company from other states where these books have been successfully used, and the mechanical work will be done in "Washington. The textbooks now adopted will be the authorized school books for five years, be ginning next September. Something like jH.000,000 of patronage was involved in the 'selection. HIC ET UBIQUE. " The Problem of Vice the Same Every Large City. In New York Sun. An apparently concerted attempt is now made to stir up another spasm of moral agitation in New York like that whipped up by Parkhurst a few years ago. New York Is again represented by him and im itative parsons as given over to the flesh and the devil and filled with loathsome corruption. People to whose personal ob servation no sign of this dreadful state of things Is brought in then- dally walk and conversation are distressed by tales told them of awful hidden wickedness, and they are relied on to spread the wave of hysterical excitement. Of course, there Is much of this evil below the surface of New York life. It exists in the smallest villages in some measure, and in New York, with a crowd ed population equal to the aggregate pop ulation of several thousand villages, the sum of It must be iarge. Happily, how ever, tho activity of urban life sweeps away with Its current much of the moral HUMPHREYS' TELEPHONE 273 18 PARIS. . When in Paris telephone our house, 32 Rue Etienne-Marcel, and they will send to your hotel or tell you the nearest drug gist who keeps Humphrey's Specifics. Nearly all dealers have a supply of "77" for Grip and Colds. Specific "4" for Diar rhea, very important when traveling. "Specific T ' for Fevers, Congestion. Specific "10" for Dyspepsia, Indigestion. j Specific "15" for Rheumatism. ! Specific "IS" for Malaria. Specific "26" for Sea-Sickness. Specific "27' for Kidney and Bladder. Manual of all diseases, especially about children, sent free- For sale by all druggists, or sent on receipt of price, 25c each. Humphreys' Homeopathic Medicine Co., corner Wlll .lam and John streets, N. Y. ANTI-TRUST Bicycles MITCHELL, Golden Eagle . Cash or Installments WE TAKE YOUR OLD WHEEL IN TRADE PHOENIX Brass-lined safety-tubing, and a guarantee for the year 1900 Is Included In the price of oiir ANTI-TRUST MITCHELL AND GOLDEN EAGLES Mitchell, Lewis & Staver Co. filth which would be accumulated if ex istence was as stagnant in New York as it Is in such villages. Moreover, police protection and vigilance, almost wholly absent from rural communities, act as restraining influences in -a great town, thousrh to it naturallv tends every form nt antamrMnvr trr and rasealitV the world over. Practically, in New Tork the whole of that part of the population which is en gaged in such Industry Is known particu larly to the police. Parkhurst went about the town for months together to find out abodes of vice as to which any police man on duty In any district visited by him could have riven hlra all the ln- formation he obtained by Droloneed per- knowledge to them which was not con fessedly shared by the police. Sucn in formation Is possessed by the police of every great capital; that they nave it in New York, In London, in Farts, in iiernn, i and In all the important cities oi me world is no secret. They have no need to go to any nocturnal clerical spy to ob tain It, and there is not, and never has been, any pretense that they are under any such necessity. It Is safe to assume that every regular practitioner of crime and every professional purveyor to vicious tastes and appetites in New York is known to the police, and also all the habitual patrons of the criminal and Im moral. Every gambling place, every pool room, every "skin game," every disrepu table resort is recorded In the books or the personal knowledge of the police. Why. then, are they suffered to exist? Why are they not rooted out of the llfo of all great towns In civilization? Ac tually, as we see, they exist as features of every capital, as they always bave existed, side by side with the progress of civilization. They are the expression of tendencies in human nature which are practically irrepressible. If they are re pressed In one form they crop out forth with in another and perhaps more nox ious form. They are as Inevitable a feat ure of urban Efe as Is the vastly pre ponderating moral restraint which makes possible the preservation: of civilization; as Inevitable as are schools and churches and the homes of order and purity. No law and no enforcement of law could prevent gambling, for Instance, unless at the cost of the extermination of the hu man epeclea. Parsons preach against the desire for sudden riches as a sin; yet everybody who Is not rich Is in a hurry to get rich. Without that universal human propensity there would be no progress. Specifically It keeps busy the great gamb ling center of Wall street. So, also, there are natural Impulses In human nature which no civilization, no re ligion, haa yet been able to conquer by artificial restraints. The natural man still remains with Imperious tastes and appetites, unsubdued by thousands of years of the taming, process of civiliza tion, and every government which ha set out to force them under Its unsparing control has wasted Its authority. Tho church Itself cannot enforce conventional morality ok Its own members: no more than a physician can compel his patients to obey the laws of health. Nobody obeys those laws, even though length of life Is the reward. Men In the aggregate, however, are bet ter than men individually The faults and defects of New York as a community are less than those of the average Inhabitant of It. Such corruption as there Is In the city government Is small comparatively to the aggregate of misdoings In private business representing transactions ol equal magnitude. Great complaint la made of our American municipal corpo rations; but really their etandard of hon esty Is higher rather than lower thap that of Tirtvata corooratlons. Run over the history of our railroad and other great corporat'ons, call to mind your experience of business morality, and the further you go, the broader your sweep, the more con vinced you will be of the superiority of public morality. Nobody who has lived In New York con tinuously for the last generation can look back at the past without observing a steady tendency to improvement In the town. It Is a far more orderly and de cent town than it used to be. It is far better governed. Morally, so far, at least, as the outward view shows, it is superior to any other great capital In the world. The quiet and peaceful citizen encounters none of those terribly vicious manifesta tlono of which we hear so much now. unless like Parkhurst he goes out to hunt for them. Of course, he can find them in New York; he can find them In the most secluded rural community; he can find them In his own heart, but they are hidden here as they are hidden there, and only their aggregation in a great community makes the search for them the easier for anybody who has a pro pensity for tt- Thls periodical upturning of the moral filth-of the town, of which we have now an example. Is largely the consequence of a pruriency of imagination in thosj engaged In the enterprise of which they themselves are not conscious. It Is a provocative quest even for the purest souls. so prone Is human nature to evil of the sort, Vice Is so dangerously at tractive to the carnal mind that even the very Investigation and description of it though with a view to Its extirpation may be dangerous, so unruly Is'the imag ination tauon. ... v ThB explorer Of SOClal sewers mUS De ever on his guard lest the devll.be his 25,000 shares of stock for sale, for development SUlde. Actually this provocative vice Is , purposes. Directors J. Frank Watson. Pres.; t,nt- tha m-Mt nnrt r!ftininiNhlnc- feattire I Merchants National Bank; R. L. Durham, Vlco not the great ana aisungusning reature . d Merchants National Bank; H. a of New Tork life which It appears to be Breedea of H. a Ereeden & Co.; B. C. Eck to the minds of those Investlgatora who enberger, Com'l Agent Michigan Cent. By,; approach too close to it to determine its gY-; ghf At' Cnloa Pac relative Importance. The purer atmos- aatSMcS?5 Commerce. a phere In which the vast mass of a popu- see experts' reports. Send for prosoectus. $40 STE" $50 .... . $25 to $35 $40 FIRST AND TAYLOR STREETS latlon of between 3,000,000 and 4,000,000 are dwelling and moving Is the really Import ant characteristic ot the town. t ' Morocco's Future. Baltimore Sun. At Madrid it seems to be believed that France has adopted a policy of absorbing Morocco, desiring to make he whole of Northwestern Africa French territory. Various steps have been taken, I? is said, to this end. French troops often make free with the frontier, and there Is talk of dethroning the present emperor in favor of a protege of France. Italy and Spain have expectations of obtaining a share of Morocco, but their chances ara slender. The other great powera feel an Interest In the fate of tho eniplre, be cause of Its nearness to Europe and ths prospect of losing a market If the French tariff were applied In Morocco as it la m Algeria and Tunl3. No doubt the peo ple of that badly governed country would be better off under French administrators than they are at pre6ent. They could nardiy be governed worse, unless, per haps, Russia or Spain took them in hand. If Morocco is to cease to be independent the world would probably accept French mastery with equanimity, provided the "open door" Is maintained. Printer Committed Sal eld e. WHATCOM, Wash., May 12. James L. Woods, printer. 600 Golden Gate avenue, San Francisco, committed suicide hera last night by taking chloral. FOR WELL PEOPLE. An Easy Way to Keep WelL It Is easy tp keep well If we would only observe each day a few simple rules ot health. The all-Important thing Is to keep the stomach right and to do this It Is not necessary to diet or to follow aset rule or bill of fare. Such pampering simply makes a capricious appetite and a feel ing that certain favorite articles of food must be avoided. Professor WIechold gives pretty good advice on this subject. He says: "I am 63 years old, and have never had a serl ons Illness, and at the same time my life has been largely an Indoor one, but I early discovered that the way to keep healthyvas to keep a healthy stomach, not by eating bran crackers or dieting of any sort; on the contrary I always eat what my appetite craves, but for the past eight years I have made It a dally practice to take one or two of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets after each meal, and. I attribute my robust health for a man of. my age to the regular dally use of Stuart's Tablets. "My physician first advised me to use them because he said, they were perfectly harmless and were not a secret patent medicine, but contained only the natural digestive, peptones and diastase, and after using them a few weeks I have never ceased to thank him for his advice. "I honestly believe the habit ot taking Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets after meals Is the real health habit, because their use brings health to the sick and ailing and preserves health to the well and strong." Men and women past 50 years of ag need a safe digestive after each meal t Insure a perfect digestion and to ward off disease, and the safest, best known and mo3t widely used Is Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. They are found In every well-regulated household from Maine to California, and In Great Britain and Australia are rapidly pushing their way Into popular favor. All druggists sell Stuart'- Dyspepsia Tablets, full sized pkgs., at 50 cents and for a weak stomach a fifty-cent package will often do fifty dollars worth of good. 1 I will guarantee that my Kidney Curs will rare 00 per cent, of all forms of kidney complaint and la maay Instances ths most serious forms of Blight's disease. If the disease Is com plicated send a four ounce vial of urine. We will analyse It and adTlse yoa Xres what to do. MUKXOJf. Jit all &iaUU. 25c a rial. Ga!! t HeaMA tea xadlcLdTce fres, 1503 Area it-, ran. investors, Attention! Phenomenal Profits In Oi! Tho Oriental OH & Fuel Co., Incorporated under tt law ot Oregon, owna ICO acres of oil lasd in the heart of the oil belt of Cali fornia. Property has been reported on by C W. Fox. for 15 years with the Standard Oil Co.. i and Colonel M. II. Osden. field expert, Pro- I Am nit Tyrehjmr. of Sat Franelseo. Onlr ' .4 nemLd. kskui -V "'U -.