tttv RTTVnAV OHEGON'IAN. PORTLAND. APRIL 7, 1912. G . ' : ' ROBERTS BELIEVED TO BE Wl Suspected Slayer of Autoists Shows Nervousness at Scene of Crime. EIGHT IDENTIFY PRISONER Sheriff Steren Takr ez-Conrlct Over Ground Wbere Fatal Shot Tver Fired - Denxiner Fallen During Ordeal. Cootlnnlng to trngthn th chain et circumstantial v!dno to prov that H- E. Robert, an ex-convict. Is tbe man who mnrdered Oeorg Hutlnm and Donald M. Stewart. In an attempted holdup on the Whltehoas road, March S9. the officer yesterday secured eiht positive Identifications showing that Robert was at the ecene of the crime a few hour before It took place and wa within a half roUe of It the next morning. Roberta oooree from the time he I aliased to hare fired the fatal shots Into the speeding automobile In which were the two unfortunate young men until ha arrived at the home of his mother. U mtlea outhat of Oregon City, haa been traced almost in detail, there blng but two or three houre still unaccounted for. v I her lft Stevens and Deputy Sheriff Leonard, of Multnomah County, and Sheriff Mass, of Clackamas County, took Roberta out In an automobile yesterday to the acene of the crime and to Oregon City and worked up what la considered eom of the most Important vldenc ao far produced. The prisoner was out all day with the officers and was shown all kinds of traces of the crime he left behind, which he could not account for. TeT ! PeJllea Malnlainlra a eurly disposition. Rob erta followed the officers, still making no denials and offering no suggestions. His only comment wa an occasional oath and sarcastic remarks to the of ficers, which apparently grw worse as paw aTldence against him was pro- '"eserlff Steven declared last night that the day was the hardest for Rob erts of any since the Investigation has been under way. Roberts, apparently tired out, waa returned to the Jail and placed In Ma cell and allowed to rest all eight. The Sheriff said he waa la an extremely nervous condition and a collapse only Is held back by a strong nerve. rrom Portland the party went to the home of C. C. Ruenltx, a florist, who Uvea a half mile west of the scene of the tragedy. Mr. Ruentts appeared In the road as the officer In an automo bile pulled up. Robert waa the first to speak. Re said. In a surly manner: "Hullo, old man." Ruenlta In telling what he knew of Roberts said that he first saw him March 17 at about 10 p M Roberta waa In the Ruenlta back yard when Mr. Ruenlta went out with a lantern. He asked for a place to sleep and. Inasmuch as It was raining. Mr. Ruenlts put him In an old shack near the house. He slept the next morn ing until o'clock, when he got up and. after having had breakfast, left the place. Roberta See After Crime. The officers In the Investigation Fri day found where Roberts had been seen up to I o'clock the afternoon of the tragedy and found evidence of where he had told that he was going to gel money, even though he could find no work. Testerday the first evidence of Rob erts' whereabouts after the crime was divulged. A man waa found about -three-quarters of a mile from the scene of the crime who positively Identified Roberta aa having appeared from the brush near the scene of the crime the following morning. This man's name has been withheld by Sheriff Stevens. This man said yeaterday after iden tifying Roberts: "I was plowing In my field when this man appeared at the far end coming from the brush ami tree. This was at noon. In hla hand he carried a China pheasant, but had no gun or bundle. Walking up to me he held the bird up and asked If t would cook It for him for dinner. I told htm I was batching and didn't have time, hot referred him to a log gers camp on down the road a short distance. Among other things he said before he left, was that he bad slept in the brush down on the side hllL This I should Imagine was but a short distance from the scene of the crime." After getting this Information the. officer went with Roberts to a camp owned by a man named McOee where Roberts appeared on the day follow ing the tragedy and asked to have the pheasant cooked. Four persons In the camp positively Identified him. The camp Is situated near the Boone's Ferry road and within a half mil of where the automobile tragedy occurred. The cook at the camp In telling the officers her story said: Art lama Are Told by Cook. "This man walked Into the ramp and held up a hen pheaaont which had been shot almost to pieces. He said be 'had been sleeping oat In the woods and the bird flew down on hla pillow and woke him hp and for that reason be shot It- He waehed himself at the camp and then ate a hearty dinner. Upon finishing It he pulled out a purse and gave me It cents. I told him I dkdn't want the money but he said be never asked for anything for nothing. He acted rery peculiarly while In the camp. He spoke at least six times about that pheasant. .He went away and left ft In camp. He said also that he had been working at a logging camp in the neighborhood for $: a month. I knowing that there wa no logging camp nearby, asked him where the camp waa. He quickly changed Ma statement to working on a farm. "Finally he said he waa going to Portland and ha started for the road. It waa very apparent, however, that he did not follow tha road because Mr. McGee cam up a few minutes later and ha had not seen the man. At the time he waa bere be carried no gun or bundle. Past Deed Related. He related a atory of how he at tempted one time to blow up the penl- tentlary. but waa given away by a fellow convict, who was afraid of be ing killed. He also told of attempt ing to give a man. against whom he had a grudge, a revolver loaded with dynamite. Sheriff Stevens said last night that there la ao longer any question about tbe guilt of Roberts. "J had two ob jects la taking him ont to aee all these people." said the Sheriff. The first Is that we expect to have to oonvlct him on circumstantial evidence unless . he confesses. I want to give him a chance to talk to the people If he de sires. Tha second reason Is to Identify him and get tUe aLatementa of th EAKEHN6 STUDENTS OF LEGAL DEPARTMENTS OF WILLAMETTE AND ORE GON TJNIVEESITIES WILL DEBATE JUDICIAL jtUiUAUU.-- In the third annual debate between representatives of the legal depart ment of th University of Oregon and Willamette University, at the .Women of Woodcraft Hall. Tenth and Taylor streets, next Friday night, the subject for discussion will be the "Judicial Recall." Willamette will defend the recall of the Judiciary, and it peaker will be George T. Wll.on. leader; Mrton R. Deleng and Glen T. Welle, associate. Thlr manager 1 w. A, Mlnton, Speakers for tha University of Oregon who will sssall the removal of Judgea by recall will be James R. Bain, leader, and William R. Singletary and John Peter, associates. P. O'Brien and A. M. Frank are managing the detail of th debate for the State Unlveralty debater. The team from Willamette has not been defeated in two year, while Oregon this year ha what 1 considered tbe strongest team it haa organised for debating purpose. witnesses against him. People soon forget little details, and by taking the prisoner to them they will be reminded and will remember when th time cornea for trial. "We are giving Roberta every chance to protect himself, but he does not seem to want to. H make no dentals further than to ay he la not guilty, and he has not attempted to give us any evidence to show that he 1 not guilty. There ia not the slightest doubt in my mind but that he is guilty of the crime. He Is a man who would do such a thing and we have evidence which ia abaolutely conclusive, I be' lleve." MANY FINE DOGS SHOWN (Conitnoed rrom First Page.) tnlin. owned bv Mrs. R. O. Mitchell Innes. wins Perkins Hotel trophy. Best Great Dane ero, owned oy Kate W. Bodkin, win Toon Buffet prise. Best Pointer dog Eectrtm Ranger, owned by Charles R. Campion, wins Portland Oss Company trophy. Best Pointer bltcli Champion Walla Walla Rush, owned by Mrs. C J. Ellis, wins H, C McAllster trophy. Best Pointer In novice class Drug Store Rip. owned by Ross A Farr, wins John Pltrhburn trophy. nest Encltsn better oog i:nampion Handeome Dan It, owned by Mrs. Alan trophy. Best English Setter bitch Kulshaa Francis, owned by Rowland O. Oam weli. wins Judge Waldemar Seton trophy. Best English Setter In novice class Prince Rtpp, owned by Max Flelschner, wins Tom Sweeny trophy. Best Irish Seter dog Champion Bow, owned by C. B. May. wins . Marcus Flelschner trophy. Best Irish better in novice class- Champion Bow, owned by C B. May, wins Alan Joy. Jr.. trophy. Best Cocker Spaniel dog Bwana Turn bo, owned by D. P. Cresswell, wins J. Wesley Ladd trophy. Best Cocker tfpanlel bltcli Victoria Tlney. owned by Mrs. A. J. Garesche, wins waiter B. Moneyman tropny. Other than Mark Cooker Spaniel Ine- Champion Mission Roue, wlna Dr. S. Slocum trophy. Other than black Cocker Spaniel Mtch Lady Coaette, owned by Mrs. Ted Klelhofer, wins Hendrlckaen A Co. trophy. Best sabl and whit Collie South port Rock, owned by Arthur Murphy, wins Paul Weaslnger trophy. Best sable, and white Collie bitch Olen Tana Surprise, owned by the Glen Tana Kennel, wlna Covey Motor Car Company trophy. Beat sable and white Collie pup Glen Tana Surprlee, owned by Glen Tana Kennele. wins Hof Brau trophy. Best Collie other than sable and white Glen Tana Daisy, owned by Olen Tsna Kennel, wins Mr. Zoo R. Mor row trophy. Best novice Collie, and color Glen Tana Surprise, owned by Olen Tana Kennels, win Mrs, Elisabeth Grlerson trophy. Best Bull dor. male Khartoun. owned bv prguelow Kennels, win Elwood Wile trophy. Best Bull dog bitch Breamore Hy degrade. owned bv spraguelow Kennels, wins Felix Frledlander trophy. Best Bull dog In novice class Ches terfield Marv, owned by J. L. Teexluff, wins Andy Weinberger trophy. Bull dog pup, either sex Tlge, owned by R. E. Montgomery, win A. M. Cronln trophy. Best Irish TerHei Tom Fiddler, owned by Mrs. T. D. Murphy, win the Imperial Hotel trophy, f DlllkaohbltchrFt8ndale.dZouo mglo oc Best Poodle Rsscall, owned by B. 8. Orlff. win Will Knight trophy. Best French Bull dog Pierre Jacques, owned bv Mrs Roy Quesaelle. wins Mevee Restaurant trophy. Best Bull Terrier dog Champion Sound End Sombrero, owned by Mrs. G. C. Israel, wlna Orpheum Theater trophy Best Bull Terrier bitch Stllletto Keen Kutter, owned by Frank E. Wat kins, wins Ira F. Powers trophy. Best Bull Terrier pup Duke, owned by Constance French Hodder, win Master Buddy Holman trophy. Best Bull Terrier In novice class Sound End Beauty, owned by Lionel Gettleson. wins Buffum A Pendleton trophy. Best Bull Terrier, either ex. owned bv a member of the Bull Terler Club of America Stllletto Ken Kutter, owned by Frank E Welkins, wins above club's trophy. Best Boston Terrier dog Brookllne. owned bv Jack Bradshaw, wins Hon eyman Hardware Company trophy. Best Boston Terrier bitch Pegy. owned bv Dr. Emeat Lupton. wfns James Hlslop trophy. Bert Boston Terrier In novice class Pegry. owned Dr. Ernest Lupton, wins C. Feldenhelmer trophy. Best smooth-haired Fox Terrier dog Sabine Radium, owned by Irvine- C. .-kermn. wlna American Fox Terrier Club trophy. Beat Sox Terrier bltoh JiaUnomah ' " t. cw. ni I.. -),,.,, ,.r pirn at f rPf RAII rt fl HT I Frantic, owned by W. B. Fechheimer, wins W. H. Fltxfterald trophy. Best wire-haired Fox Terrier End cllffe Jester, owned by Irving C. Ack erman. wlna Empress Theater trophy. Best Fox Terler pup. either lex Multnomah Frantic, owned by W. B. Fechheimer, wins Western Hardware trophy. , Beat Airedale Terrier dog Kotenal Chinook, owned by Kotenal Kennels, wins Blumauer, Frank Company trophy. Best Airedale bitch Mount View 0k Root, owned by James G. Keefe, win Dr. Earl Smith trophy. Best Alreilale In novlco class Koot enai Chinook, owned by Kotenal Ken nels, wins W. M. Davis trophy. Best Maltese Terler Nipped, owned by Mrs. M. Olsen, win Lotus Cafe trophy. . . Best Japanese Spanlol Kobe, owned by Mrs G. S. Taylor, wins Miss Ursula St. George trophy. ' Best dog bred by evhlbltor Cham pion Arbutus Swallow, owned by J. S. Hlckford, and Whither, win Evening Telegram trophy. . , Best flog In sporting division ladle variety class Alandell's Redskin, owned bv Miss Margaret B. Smith, win tbe Heltkemper trophy. Bs.t doc In ladles- variety class non sportlnr division Champion Southport Kale ty. owned by Mrs. Florence Brydon. wins P. J. Martin trophy. Best do In members clas Rodney Mer ley. owned by J. J. McCarthy and Eugene West, wins the Oregon Journal trophy. Best do, veteran class Champion Walla Walla Rush, owned by Mrs. C. J. Belli, wins Mrs. M. L- Kline trophy. Bet do In special puppy class Koote nai Chinook, owned by Kootenai Kennels, wins Oregon Hotel trophy. Best bull tsrrler other than white Jean N- owned by Mr. R. P. Martin, wins Meier Frank trophr. Best Pomeranian, either sex Ireland Saury Olrl. owned by H. O- Ibarra, wins B. 8. Ultnp.on trophy. Brit English Toy Spaniel Went, owned by Mr. R. D. Bordeaux, wlna English Res taurant prise. Best Encllah Better pup Lectrlm Dash, owned by Chsrles R. Campion, wins Oaskar Rueber trophy. ALBANY HOLDS A SHOOT (Continued From First Pae.) J. W. Dougla. 21; Z. W. Drake, 16; F. H. Pfelffer, It: J. W. Warner. 10; P. J. Baltimore. 11: W. G. Ballack, 2: Frank Hackleman. 10: C. O. Clloe. 18; Grant Froman. 28: J. M. French. 22. The medal which the Albany club has bung up for premier shooting will be worn until the next shoot by John W. Warner, hla core of 14 having been the highest recorded by an Albany club member yesterday. The Albany Gun Club wa organised about two month ago, and now haa a membership of 48. It has established ground at Hackleman' Grove, Just southeast of the city, and the Portland men here yesterday assert that, all thing considered. It is the finest shoot ing ground in the state. The offlcera of the club are: Grant Froman, presi dent: W. G. Ballack, vice-president: F. P. Tracy, secretary; Nell Bain, treas urer, and Dr. H. A. Lelnlnger. field captain. MATTHEW ACHESON DIES Resident of Irian County 40 Year Stricken at Albany. AIBANT. Or., April .( Special.) Matthew Acheson. well-known resi dent of Linn County for 40 years, died last night at his home in this city at the age of T8. Born in Ohio in 1814, he moved to Omaha when young and came to Oregon In 1872. He settled on a farm near Shedd and resided there until 10 year ago, when he oame to Albany. He wa a prominent member of the United Preebyterlan Church for many year. Mr. Acheson la urvlved by vea children, George 8. Acheson, of Port land; Mr. Jennie Gaff, of Albany: Mr. Dawson, of Pullman. Wash.: Wilbur Acheson, of Phedde; M. H. Acheson. of Alrlle: Rev. John L. Acheson, pastor of the Third United Presbyterian Church of Portland, and L Ray Acheson. of Pendleton. - Balancing Uer Account. Lipplnoort's Magazine. "I am sorry. Mrs. Tinkle," said th cashier, to the pretty little woman at the window, "but you have overdrawn the account placed here by your hus band to the amount of twenty dollara." Mrs. Tlnkl looked perplexed for a moment then her fao cleared and aha amUed brightly. EXPORTERS FACING HGREASE 111 RATES Fifty-Cent Rise In Tariff on Shipments From Portland Officially Announced. BURDEN CAUSES PROTEST Change Mean Tha Differential of 60 Cents Malt Be Shouldered Here In Competition With Paget Sound Interest. Exporters have learned officially from Frank Waterhoue A Company that In addition to tha tariff on June shipment from Portland to the Orient and Manila being 50 cent a ton high er, that th am ratea will apply here after. It mean that there will be a dif ferential of 80 cent shouldered by Portland in competition with Puget Sound so long a tha present Water bouse aervlce la maintained, which is expected to b until August 1, when the steamer owned by Andrew Weir Company are to ba withdrawn. Chaage Told la Lttera. Letters have been received setting forth the change In rates, which fol lowed unofflolal Information obtained last month that the June shipments would ba acoepted only at an advance of 60 cents a ton. Exporters assert that they hav knowledge to the ef fect the Waterhouse steamers will car ry cargo from Northern porta at rates prevailing there, as th Weir interests Insist that Portland pay 60 oents a ton additional for the trip into the Co lumbia River. The increase is but another burden that haa been placed on shippers here since the Waterhouse line waa given control of the situation, through an agreement entered Into with the Port land A Asiatlo last year. When the Portland Asiatlo wa operating its steamers and the Waterhouse carriers were In competition for Portland busi ness, the latter paid insurance on car goes between Portland and Puget Sound because Its vessels followed that route in both directions, while tha Portland ft Asiatic sailed direct for the Far East. Insurance Falls on Shipper. When tha agreement wa made Waterhouse refused to carry the In surance and it fell on the ahlppers. Beside there haa been added Interest on drafts drawn on consignees when bills of lading were signed, the extra expense covering the period between the time the cargo waa loaded and when It was finally started across th Pa ciflo from th last port of call In the North. It is said by exporter that they are tired of the arrangement through whloh they are trying to maintain trade with buyers across the Pacific, and there U not the slightest doubt but that they will endeavor to mova all cargo possible from Northern ter ritory into Puget Sound, there to ship on other lines as a means of escaping the added burden here. At tha same time strenuous effort are being made to Induce other to establish a line from here, though Waterhouse is work ing on a scheme to get other vessel to replace the Weir carrier. If new. comer get Into the field they stand a chance of securing; virtually all of the patronage. The next liner of the Waterhouse col lection will be the British steamer Oceano, which I looked for here April 22 or 24, and all space allotted Port land firms on her has been taken. She is expected to remain here a week. ELLICOTT AIDS MILITIAMEN Maryland Selected as Ship for Big Gun Target Instruction. Officers of the Oregon Naval Militia are looking forward with pleasure to meeting Captain J. M. Elliott, com manding the cruiser Maryland at San Diego next week, aa the Navy Depart ment has sent a communication re questing that two offlcera of the organ ization, the commanding or exeoutive officer and the ordnance officer pre ferred, be detailed to proceed to San Diego and watch target practice that will continue four days, beginning APrU 1B- - ,, A The same system haa been followed on the Atlantic aide, where many states were represented on various vessels, and It. was thought officers of Paclflo Coast States would be sent there, but the circular Irora Commander A. H. Davis, of the Navy Department, sta tioned at Washington, D. C. and In charge of Naval Militia affairs, saya that Oregon. Washington and Califor nia men are to go aboard the Mary land. Captain Elliott left Portland last July, after having passed two year here a inspector of the Seventeenth Lighthouse District, and was promi nently connected with the early work in the Oregon Naval Mllltla, besides he wa In command of the Maryland be fore, when she won the gunnery tro phy. HI experience and that of hi crew, combined with the fact he evinced uch a deep Interest in the Mllltla, make him doubly desirable as an instructor for the Oergon offlcera. WOOL RATES TO GO HIGHER American-Hawaiian Will Raise Tar iffs to New York. Wool ratea between Portland" and New York will be ellghtly advanced. April 16 by the American-Hawaiian Steamship Company, though the first wool movement of the season from the Columbia River Basin, whloh will ba loaded on the tejner Faloon. due to day, will be handled under the prevail ing tariff. Under the schedule of charge to go Into effect a week from Monday, greased wool In sack will be raised from (6 to 76 cents on each 100 pounds. Greased wool In compreed bale will take a rate of 45 cents, an increase of five oents. Sooured wool in compressed bale will ba 60 cents Instead of 46 cents, and aooured wool in sack will ba 85 cent, the prevailing rate being 80 cent. Virtually all wool ent from here by water la destined for Boton. being traneshipped from New Tork and the initial consignment of the season cama from. Echo, being transported to Portland by the Open River Transpor tation Company. CROWN OP INDIA IN RIVER Discharge of Inverldp Hurried So She Can Start Lumber Cargo. Under charter to Balfour, Guthrie & Company, the British ship Crown of In dia entered the river yesterday from an-FTanclaocv to load lumber tor Capo J Town. She will be given her cargo at A lawk dock, to which place it will be barged from the Inman-Fouisen mail. The British steamer Inverkip, which Is discharging Antwerp cargo at the North Bank dock, will continue work ing today, so that the last can be un loaded, as she is to proceed to the Port land mill to start her lumber cargo for Port Plrle, Th schooner Meteor, lum ber laden for Balboa, will be shifted from Westport to the lower harbor ts day and Is to be taken in tow by the steamer Francis H. Leggett, which will return from Aberdeen and finish her Balboa cargo at Westport and Presoott, The next lumber carrier ,to arrive for offshore loading will be the British steamer Ocean Monarch, of the Maple Leaf Line, whloh Is due to sail from Vancouver, B. C, April 16 and will take on 1,000,000 feet at Presoott and Linn ton for tha United Kingdom. SAILORS TO BURT COMRADE Funeral of Boston ' Bugler to Be Held Tomorrow. Ordera have been issued by Lieuten ant Bloomberg, exeoutive officer of the cruiser Boston, for all members of tha Oregon Naval Mllltla stationed' here to report aboard tha vessel at 13 o'olock tomorrow for the purpose of at tending the funeral of Albert N. Ban nister, lata bugler of the Militia, who rTKAMXa DTTEtUflMCa wane Beavsr. . Data San Pedro.. In port Cue U. Elmore Bear Tillamook.. .In r iort San Pedro.. ..April T Breakwater.., falcon Gee. W. Elder. Rom City.... Alliens Roanoke. .. .. Kaaaaa City.. ..Coos Bay April ..San FY.neUcO. April T . .Eaa Dliit.... April 8 .Ean Pedro.... April 13 . Enreka....... April 13 . ui D1.e . April 14 April xi ebedoled t Pi art. Kama Bus H. Elmore Tale Beaver. ...... Harvard. ..... Tor. Data . Tillamook . April 0 .S F for U A.. April 8 .Ban Pedro.... April T .& r. for U A.. April 10 Breakwater. .. .Coos Bay apru i an Franciaoo April ID Falcon Oeo. W. Elder. P. H. Lecrett Bear Alliance...... Roanoke. ..... Rosa City .San Dleso.... April 10 Balboa. April 11 San Pedro. Eureka. April 13 .April 15 San Dl.ro. April 17 .Ban Pedro. ...April IT Ksnsss City. . .San Pedro.... April 22 was drowned from a canoe near the ship Friday. The deceased's mother arrived yes terday from her home at Port Or chard, Wash., but pending the selec tion of the place of interment made no definite arrangements for the funeral, other than that it will be held tomor row afternoon. Details will be made aboard the Boston of palbearers, an escort, firing squad and the band. As tha deceased was the only bugler of the organization. Bandmaster White, formerly a trumpeter in the regular service, will probably be asked to sound "taps" at the grave. The crew will also assemble today, as a landing party drlH is scheduled for noon, small boats containing the citi zen sailors being towed by the Boston's steam launch to the Waverly Golf Links, and on the return details of the funeral will probably be announced. Marine Notes. When the steamer Modoc left for the lower river yesterday she carried a shipment of machinery for the St. Hel ens Mills Company, which originated In Wisconsin and weighed 25,350 pounds. After discharging inward cargo from San Francisco the steamer Temple E. Door sailed yesterday for Grays Har bor to load lumber for the South. Cannery supplies having been load ed at Columbia dock No. 1, the ship Berlin Is to shift today to the dock of the American Can Company to finish her cargo. ' Arthur Merrill, chief clerk in the of fice of United States Inspectors Ed wards and Fuller, has promised both officials a contribution of fish for to morrow, because he Is to visit Oregon City today on his first quest of the season for salmon. Marcus Talbot, general manager of the Port of Portland, who has been Iii San Francisco on business connected with the future operations of the Port, is expected home today and will make a report of his trip at the monthly ses sion of the commission Thursday. With her exterior showing a fresh coat of white paint, her cabins reno vated, machinery overhauled, repairs made on deck and generally in fine condition, the Kamm steamer Lurllne will resume servloe between Portland and Astoria tomorrow, replacing the steamer Undine, which will be laid up. Pedestrians crossing- the Steel bridge at 1 o'clock yesterday afternoon thought that the fire drill aboard the steamer Beaver, of the San Francisco St Portland fleet, was not a stage af fair until they saw the crew scramb ling for the boats on the upper deck. During the fire drill 12 streams of water were running. Movements ol Vessels. PORTLAND, April a Arrived Steamer Asuncion, from Eaa Fraacleco; steamer Ca tania, from Port ban Luis; French bark Eugene Schneider, trom Callao. balled Bteamer Temple E. Dorr, for Grays Harbor. Astoria. April 9. Condition at the mouth of the river at 6 P. M., smooth; wind, southeast. 34 miles; weather, clear. Sailed during tho night, steamer Caaco, for Sun Francisco. Bulled at 2 A. M., steamer Northland, for Ban Pedro. Arrived at mid night and lett up at A. M., steamer Asun cion, from San Franclaco. Arrived down at Z A. M., bark Levi G. Burgees. Left up at 8 A. M., French bark Eugene Schneider, balled at 4 A. M., steamer Carlos, for San Francisco; steamer Hhoahone. for tian Diego. Arrived at 6 A. M. and left up at 2 P. M.. steamer W. 6. Porter. from Monterey. Sailed at 6:30 A. M-, steamer Qutliault, for Ban Francisco. Sailed at 7 A. -r.. steamer Alliance, for Coos Bay and Eureka. Arrived at 11:23 A. M., British ship Crown of In dia, from San Franclaco. Arrived at 12:45 and left np at 1:45 P. M.. steamer Catania, from Port Ban Luis. Balled yesterday, steamer Aurella, for Ban Francisco. ban Franclaco, April 6. Sailed at 1 A. M-. Bteamer J. U. Stetson, for Portland. Ar rived Steamer Geo. W. Elder, from San Diego, Arrived at 11 A. M., steamer Roa noke, from Portland. Balled at 1 P. M., steamer Kansas City, for Ban Pedro. Ar rived at 4 P. M.. steamer Toaemlte, from Portland, for San Diego. Sailed laat night, steamers Baglnaw, Tamalpais and Johaa Poulaen. for Portland. , Coos Bay. April 9. Sailed at S P. M.. steamer Breakwater, for Portland. Seattle, April 8. Arrived Steamers Inaba Maru. Mexico Mam, from Tacoma; La touche. from Southweatern Alaska. Balled Steamers Lyra, for Balina Crux, via. San Francisco; Watson, for Tacoma; tug SheU koft. for San Franclaco. San Francisco. April 6. Arrived Steam ers Nann Smith, from Coos Bay; Tallac, from Seattle; Fifleld, from Bandon; Roa noke, from Portland; Thomas L. Wand, from Everett: Umatilla, from Victoria; Oleum, from Seattle. Sailed Steamers Pennsyl vania, for Ancon; J. B. Stetson, for Astoria; Helene, for Raymond; Governor, for Seat tle; Enterprise, for Hllo; Santa Monica, for Wlllapa: ship Edward Sowall, for Honolulu: bark Star of Peru, for Bristol Bay; schooner Bertha Dolber, for Slmonaaky. Los Angeles, April a. Arrived Steam schooner San Gabriel, from Umpqua River; Shasta, from Bellingham; Hornet, from Mukllteo; Willamette, from Puget Sound; Centralis, from Grays Harbor; Excelsior, from Coos Bay. Sailed Centralla, for San Diego: Carmel. for Columbia River; Glen dale, for Grays Harbor; Ruby, for Coquille River. - Tide at Astoria Sunday, High. Low. 8:61 A. M.....6 feet(10:SS A. M 0.6 foot 6:18 P. M....-A.1 fsetllO:S4 P. M....3.8 feet CARD OF THANKS. Mrs. Jane E. Hastings and family desire to thank their friends for their kind sympathy and floral tributes dur ing their recent Sad bereavement of theiv son and brother, George. CDAT unt BE Agreement Between Eastern and Western Growers Is but Temporary. OREGON SIZE IS WANTED Opposition in East May Be Leas Now, as Advantage of Packing Fruit In Standard ' Boxes Is Belny Appreciated. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, April 6. The agreement reached recently between Western apple growers and Eastern commission merchants to eliminate from the Sulzer bill all reference to the apple box has not definitely settled the question of standardizing boxes in which apples are marketed. The agreement merely means that this question has been put over for future consideration, and prob ably will be revived at the next ses sion of Congress. - When the Sulzer bill came up for consideration it was found that there waa considerable difference of opinion as to what should be the standard ap ple box. The Oregon growers and other Western apple men contended for tho present Oregon box as the stand ard, claiming It had been developed after years of experiments and waa an Ideal box for Western fruit. The Eulzer bill, which was drafted at the request of Eastern commission merchants, undertook to increase the size of the box, but there developed no essential reason why the box they fixed upon wag in any way preferable to the box now In use in the West. It was said that the Western commission men were anxious to increase the size of the box, so that they could use that fact as Justification for increasing the price of apples. Moreover, If they could have the standard box made larg er than the Oregon box, and if Oregon and other Western growers should con tinue to use the present size box. It would go into the market branded "short box," and on this account the commission men could refuse to pay the grower the present price for West ern apples. - Welters Apple the Best. It is a well recognized fact that Western apples now command the top price In the Eastern markets. They are uniform in quality, carefully se lected and carefully packed, and each box is virtually guaranteed. East ern consumers take this into account and are willing to pay more for West ern apples than for Eastern apples, which are almost exclusively marketed in barrels, or not carefully packed, not uniform in size and are almost Invari ably wormy and of varying quality. The Eastern grower, by using the bar rel, has been able to sell all his small and imperfect fruit by packing it In the center, saving his best to top off the barrel. When it was found that no agree ment could be reached on the question of a standard apple box. all interested parties agreed to eliminate the box feature from the Sulser bill, and In the next year endeavor to reconcile the differences, so that they could come back to Congress next Winter and ask for the fixing of a standard apple box that would be satisfactory to all sec tions of the country. Boxes Gain Greater Sway. Eastern growers have no particular Interest in tbe apple box today, al though some Virginia apples are be ing marketed in boxes, and Northern growers are beginning to appreciate the advantage of shipping their fruit in the same way that Western apples are sold. It is believed by apple men that the time will soon come when the best grades of apples East as well as West, will He sold only in boxes, while Inferior fruit in all parts of tho coun try will be packed in barrels. If this opinion gains greatly during the next year it would be likely to bring an agreement on a standard apple box which would bo substantially the same as the Oregon box now in common use throughout the West. BOSS OF. YOUR NERVES Blessing of Keeping Latter Under the Most Perfect Control. Chicago Tribune. Nervous men rule the world. They are the salt of tne earth, says Dr. Al fred T. Schofield In his book on "Nerves in Disorder." "The leading men in every profession are drawn from their ranks. They are men with brains that thrill, that feel, that are quick in. action, firm, clear and of high organi zation. It ia the nervous men that rule the world, not lymphatic vegetables." People of a low level of nervous or ganization are persons of small initia tive, evesfday accomplishment and meager Imagination. They do not suf fer severely under the pangs of an out raged fortune, nor do they, like a Shel ley, "fall upon the thorns of life and bleed." but. on the other hand, they are less capable of enjoyment. Their range of delights is decidedly circum scribed. Their thinking powers are but narrow. The nervous fiber capable of the highest development and differentia tion Is the brain. "The Man With the Hoe" is a clod compared with the quick-witted captains of industry, the quicker-wltted master of millions, and the quickest or highest of minds in the scientist, inventor and- artists. There is as much difference between the two types as between the sluggish toad and the far-ranging but straight to the mark bird of passage. In the progress of civilization, aa the strain upon the body has become less that on the nerve haa become more. The body is, however, given even more attention today than ever before, at any rate theoretically. If not prac tically, since it is fully recognized as the very necessary servant of the brain and mind. This is coming more and more to be considered its chief func tion, and the chief reason for keeping it in health, that it may obey orders quickly and work without painful or distracting intermissions for the mind. The nerves or the nerve fibers are the mainspring, but the body as the wheels can decidedly obstruct movement by getting clogged. The nerves impose hard tasks upon the body, but stint not their own ef forts. The body is a dependent, for the nervous system Is the agent in nearly every bodily activity. Where there Is nervous irritability or debility the body naturaly behaves somewhat erratically under auch an agency. Such eruidanoe may be compared to the blind leading the blind, although It la more like the weak tyrannizing over tha strong. Dr Bchoneld say that the manifes-tnttn'na-nf-narvouaiTltaUon are numer APPLE BOX NUT REVIVED ous and characteristic. "Physically thej may include constant or Intermitteni movement of body ana race, snarp, ringing cough, sudden hoarseness, quici and Irregular breathing, starting, twitching, flushing, palpitation of the heart, tenderness of the scalp or spine, headaches at the top and back of the head, congested look of the eyes, nolsei In the ears, sleeplessness, dyspepsia and flatuence, perspiration, flying pains and cramps and neuralgia of varioui parts. , ' "Mentally we get timidity, irritabil ity, melancholy and a dread of being alone, or 'monophobia,' or In a crowd, or 'agoraphobia,' or in close, confined spaces, or 'claustrophobia.' There is little mental control of power: wrong words may be spoken or written." These functional nerve disorders, a compared with organic nerve disorders, such aa Induce paralysis, etc., have been declared to be the most neglected of diseases. People have had more sym pathy for a man orwoman with a cold than one with "nerves," and the con sequence has been that the behavior of the world toward these sufferers has been equal to torture and cruel aug menting of their difficulty. Now mental cures through a second person or through self are very common and re spected. . "The day has come," says G. E. Part ridge, Ph. D., in his book. "The Nerv ous Life." "when we can no longer go to the doctor to be cured of all our ills. Ills have multiplied faster than the doc tors' medicines, and personalities have grown so varied and complex that everyone to a certain extent works out his own salvation." Fortunately some of the evils of the nervous life, the evils Inherent as it were in the nervous system, lean to virtue's side. There are two particular principles of growth in the progress and decay of civilization which seem to be connected with the evils of the mod ern nervohs life, say Dr. Partridge. "These principles can be called (1) the principle of increasing mentality, and (JO the principle of increasing individ uation.. Chemical compounds already highly excitable, unstable and complex, become Increasingly so in forming the nervous system. The delicacy of bal ance, the Intricacy of these compounds, has increased as activity has become more complex and mind has become dominant in the world. Mind appears as effort. Ideas, Ideals, setting tasks for the body to accomplish, and conditions to which the body must adapt itself. With Increasing Intensity of life comes instinctive craving for, and means of producing states of high intensity of consciousness, at first crude and emo tional, but finally purposeful and sus tained. These are added to man's equipment for making progress, and they also add to the stress and strain of life." With the development of the. nervous system comes increased control. Much of nervous disease is due to the fact that men are attempting to do work that requires a higher development of the nervous system than they have given themselves. They are trying to do 10-horsepower work, or lead a 10 horsepower life, with but one poor horse, and perhaps that One not well broken to the bit. Men crave intensity or fullness of life. This craving affects the quality of their ideals and puts the mind at a tension. This may amount to intoxica tion, dangerous states of excitability and intensity, unless controlled. Dr. Schofield says, however, for our comfort, that times of great excitabil ity, intensity and of imperfect control have always preceded great controlled activities. "This is illustrated in an cient history by the periods of progress in culture in Greece and iatar by the Renaissance in Europe. The same characteristics can be seen in our na tional life today. There is high in tensity, ideals far in advance of achlev ment, strain, rapidly unfolding powers, imperfect control. In the life of any growing Individual similar periods can be detected, governed by the same Jaws of progress. Periods of craving for in tensity, of unfolding power and imper fect control precede periods of great est achievement and directed effort.". CAN OVERCOME GRAVITY Inventor May Be Able to Operate Cars Through tlic Air. New Tork Times. In a little shop where there wasn't a single big man of science, though sev eral, it was said, had been invited, re porters were Introduced to a puzzling, if not wonderful, new method of rapid transit gravitationless, f rlctionlesa, electrical the Bachelet bethod of electro-magnetic levitated transportation, which, if half of what its inventor ex pects of it is realized, will presently send whole carloads of passengers whizzing on invisible waves of electro magnetism through space anywhere from 300 to 1000 miles an hour. Tho bare announcement, much less such a ride, was enough to make spectators catch their breath. Emile Bachelet, the inventor, is inno cent of college or university degrees ia science. In 1894 he says he was state electrician at Tacoma, Wash., and also city electrician. Later he came to New York, where he says he Invented a magnetic wave machine which, it was modestly explained, cures all the dis eases of blood circulation. He said he had cured two of his own children of scarlet fever and diphtheria by the ma chine. But he disclaimed any further connection with the company now oper ating it than that he receives royalties from Its use. ' It is used, he said, in ever ao many hospitals, the names of which might be learned from the com pany, but were not obtainable at hi3 shop. His latest Invention, on which he says he has spent 18 years and procured patents in 1 countries, but for which he ha yet no capital or operating com- pany, is a method of transportation that "eliminates the force of gravity, sustains any desired amount of weight by means of electro-magnetic repulsion, causes the weight so sustained to move laterally at will with great speed by means of electro-magnetic attraction or otherwise, and eliminates all friction except that of the atmosphere." He said he would prove it right there in his shop at 180 East Third street. Mount Vernon. Before starting his model car, Mr. Bachelet showed the elementary prin ciples of his invention by placing a pierced aluminum plate, half an Inch thick, on a sort of brass pigeonhole file, over a bobbin or coil of Insulated wire. Then he turned on an electric alternat ing current through a synchronized in terrupter. Off popped the aluminum plate, soaring straight upward. Thereafter Mr. Bachelet levitated an aluminum plate an eighth of an Inch thick, and above it on the same file a brass plate of equal thickness. He fetched a glass bowl of water, con taining an aluminum plate, with. sev eral live goldfish swimming above it. He placed the bowl above the coll and turned on the current. The aluminum plate rose smoothly out of the water. and as the Iisn dodged under 16; hov ered motionless In the air above the ::4 ust 'f bowl. While he was unwilling to prophe with any degree of definlteness j what his invention could do in a prac tical way, be declared it could create for experimental purposes a speed of &1- ate of 1000 miles an hour. Mr. Bachelet add ed that he had figured out the precise let aaa- , precise j I itationjf lift l I air fflr 1 operating cost of such a levitatl electro-magnetlo railway. "It would cost us 8 cents to lift pounds and maintain it in the an hour," be said. '"Th Ijram The Christian population of India ' dm bexaeady t.OW.owX