THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN. PORTLAND, OCTOBER .?!. 1315. LUMBER RATES UP AMERICAN SAILOR LEAVING PUGET SOUND WITH FULL CARGO OF GRAIN EXHIBITS HAS NAME IS LARGE LETTERS ALONGSIDE OF NATIONAL FLAG. TEST IS' OMITTED home portxnext Wednesday. The Seattle did over fii&o.uoo worth of dredflns in Coo County. The steamship Kllburn. steamer Adeline Smith and steam sotiooner Hardy are due on Cooa Bay Monday. ASTORIA. Or.. Oct, SO. (Special.) Com pleting; her carso of lumber at Knappton. the steam schooner Daisy sailed tor San r'rencjsco. Having- completed her cargo of lumber at Kalnier. the steam schooner Klamath sailed for San Pedro. . Carrying a capacity load of freight and a fair list of passengers, the steamer North sin Pacific sailed for San Francisco. The Japanese steamer Hankoko Maru ar rived after an uneventful run from Adelaide Australia, and is under charter to Balfour. Guthria t Co., to load at Portland (or the Orient. PAPER IS SHIPPED Demand for Tonnage Causes Advance of 50 Cents. .Qualified Sailors - Need Nat ' Take Examination. British Steamer Queen Maud Leaves for Australia. SAILERS NOT AVAILABLE 'deck service suffices CARGO IS FIRST TO GC 6 War Conditions Have Taken Many Vessels From Regular Coastwise Trade, Representing Capacity of 50,000,000 Feet. Following the announcement last week that Coast lumber rates had automatically gone up 50 centa thou sand feet, millnien wanting: space being responsible largely in bidding; for ton nage, there has been speculation as to "what has become of the tonnage in service during the past few months. A year ago, when the nrst flurry passed in this country after the European-war started, the larger vessels found a ready market in being chartered to take the place of many sent across the Atlantic with supplies. SiAce then almost any kind of a steamer has been taken, which could nil the bill. There is not a schooner or barkentine in the coastwise lumber trade at this time, though in 'former years during normal business, a number of them traded between Grays Harbor, the Co lumbia River and California. Statistics have been compiled showing that the vessels lost to the regular coastwise lumber trade represented a total carry ing capacity of 50,000.000 feet each trip. Rates are 13.50 a thousand feet to San Francisco from northern ports and $4 to points south of there. It Is thought in soma quarters that the tendency of rates is to go higher during the next month. A year ago there had been little effect on the Pacific Coast be cause of the war, which began li Au gust, and 13,482,051 feet were shipped to California, while for the month end ing yesterday 11,125,000 feet were started for the South. The following list of steamers in dicates their present occupation, though all were formerly in the regular Coast; lumber trade: Redondo Hoquiam 4 Taboe Graywood Fairhaven . San Ramon St. Helens 'ac?..Ii!Ia.r Melville Dollar Stanley Dollar Henry T. Scott , Daisy Freeman Edgar K. Vance General Hubbard George W. Fenwick Francis Hanify Solano Coaster Fort Bragg O. M. Clark Nann Smith Cricket Vm. Chatham t Falcon Carlos Jim Butler Mary Olson Oliver Olson Olson & Mahony . ....... Rosalie Mahony Tallao Fair Oaks, Chehalis .' John A. Hooper Willapa Alvarado Camino Navajo Paraiso Columbia - Siskiyou .' ju, ASTORIA SERVICE INCREASED Harkins Line to Operate Undine and Lurline, Withdrawing; Georglana. There will be a steamer from Port land to Astoria each morning during the Winter season in the Harkins Transportation Company's line and a steamer will depart from Astoria for Portland every evening but Sunday at 7 o'clock. The steamer Undine goes Into permanent service Tuesday on the daily run and the steamer Lurline. now J on inui route, m iu senvc n i r omtuaj, Tuesday and Thursoay at 7 A. M., leaving Astoria Mot-day, Wednesday and Friday at 10 A. M. The steamer Georgiana. which has operated since the opening of the Summer season on a daily round-trip schedule, makes her last run today and will be laid up for the Winter. Captain L. P. Hosford. manager of the Harkins fleet, made the announce ment yesterday of the change which, with the O.-W. R. & N. service, will give the lower river the best Winter schedule in Its history. The time of the Undine from Portland will be 7:46 o'clock in the morning and she will handle express, freight and passengers. The Lurline is to take care of heavy shipments and passengers as well, and her leaving time from Astoria is fixed at 10 o'clock, so as not to interfere with the steamer Harvest Queen, of the O.-W. R. & N. line, which starts up the river at 7 o'clock. The Queen leaves here rt 8 o'clock at night, ex cept Saturday. CLAIM FOR RESCUE DENOUNCED Master of Judith Says Port's Charge Will Not Be Paid. ASTORIA. Or.. Oct. 30. (Special.) The crippled Peruvian bark Judith Is still lying in the stream and is leaking at the rate of two inches an hour, but the pumps keep her clear without dif ficulty. Captain Bardl says the vessel must be taken to the wharf to discharge her cargo before repairs can be made, but he is communicating with the owners tn Peru and will take no further ac tion until he receives word from them. The barkentine will probably not be docked before Monday. The salvage claim of the Port of Portland in the sum of 83000 for rescu ing the Judith and towing her into oort has been submitted, but Captain Bardl says it is exorbitant and he will not pay It. Another thing that bids fair to add to the complications is the Teport that the barkentine Is Insured only against a total loss, while the cargo is insured against damage. COLOMBIA'S REPAIRS START Damaged Steamer to Be Ready for Carsro In About Four Days. t n .-.tor in Iho river, the cr&uir e I reading- only nine-tenths above Kro yesterday, which is an unusually "thin stase. prevented the steamer Columbia. damaged Friday morning in a collision with the tug Daniel Kern, towinsr three rock bargres. from being: lifted on the OreRon drydock until early this morning;, advantage being: taken at the tide. A contract or repairing: the ves sel was yesterday awarded to the Willamette Iron & Steel Works by V. A. Ballin. representing; the owners, and It is to be carried out on day-work basis. It is estimated that the vessel will be ready for carpo in four days. Captain C. J3. Alleut mas tec of the Being bound for Sweden the American bark EIrigo, which sailed from Fuget Bound Monday, had her name and the Btars and Stripes painted on both sides amidships, as notice to enthusiatic skippers of submarines that she be longs to a neutral country. The Dirigo is sailing in the G. W. McNear flee t and is one of a few Yankee square riggers that have been included in th e Northwest grain fleet since the ou tbreak of the European war. ' Columbia, and Captain A. R. Pearson, who piloted her from Astoria to Port land, filed reports yesterday with TJnited States Inspectors Edwards and Fuller covering -the accident, and the officials fixed 9 o'clock tomorrow morning as the time of the Investiga tion. No additional damage was found yesterday over that reported Friday night after an examination by Mr. Ballin. A force of men began work Sold to Alaska Steamship Company WiI1 lay up for the winter Will lay up for the Winter Lost Mexican trading Mexican grading Foreign trading Foreign trading Foreign trading Foreign trading Foreign trading Chartered for various trading Foreign trading Foreign trading , Foreign trading Foreign trading Mexican trading Mexican trading Mexican trading ..Mexican trading .Foreign trading Atlantic cast Foreign trading A . Foreign trading Atlantic Coast or foreign trading Atlantic Coast or foreign trading Atlantic Coast or foreign trading Atlantic Coast or foreign trading ..... .Atlantic Coast nr forpiirn tmainir Atlantic Coast or foreign trading Foreign trading Foreign trading Foreign trading - Foreign trading Foreign trading Foreign trading Foreign trading Foreign trading Foreign trading Foreign trading ' ..Atlantic Coast yesterday removing the plates that aro to oe replaced. ECHO IS READY TO DEPART Hugh IXogan, Towed by McCraken, Gets Under Way for Shanghai. ' Longshoremen yesterday finished stowing lumber aboard the barkentine Echo for Melbourne, and she may get away tomorrow. rne vessel sails Ik the service of the American Trading Company. While higher rates -have oeen paid, since her engagement- 90 shillings promise to net her owners attractive dividends. The schooner Hugh Hogan left down vesterdav !n tow of the tug John McCracken. Her destination is Shanghai. j-.umDer exports for October were 8,559.149 feet, valued at $78,030. and li.uu.uuo feet went coastwise. Lum ber exports last October were 9,620,000 reel, valued at Tios.zzo. The coast fleet carried 13.482.0al feet that month. Tl'RBIXEU WtLlj DKYDOCK Northern Pacific to Leave Run Ten Iays for Overhauling. On the sailing: of the steamer North ern Pacific for San Francisco yesterUay it was driven out that she would be taken out of service for cleaning: and painting: November 10 and that she will resume her run November 20. Th Great Northern will " maintain . the schedule until the date of beginning the Honolulu service. The Northern Pacific had 1500 tons of cargo aboard and left some on the Flavel dock yes terday. The Great Northern, due today ,hai 238 passengers and 235 tons of freight. There are aboard about 150 tons of mer chandise, some of which Is Christmas goods for merchants in Portland and other Northwest cities. REPAIRS TO DAMAGED WEST COAST VESSEL HELD IN ABEY ANCE PENDING FURTHER INSTRUCTIONS FROM OWNERS. j a -fw,.,. .. , - -- - " r -L. - t , iSr - T - - - f X N j. "-1 II I lllllll - PERITIAS BARKENTINE JUDITH LT1XU AT ASTORIA. Captain - Bardi, of the Peruvian barkentine Judith, towed Into As toria Wednesday in a waterlogged condition following; an all-nigrht battle by the tug: Wallula to hold on to the ship, has countermanded an order to shift the vessel from the stream to a dock to discharge her deck cargo as a means of facilitating: repairs. It is supposed the delay in gjettlng: the "vessel ready for sea hing;es on an understanding: between tha owners of the Judith and those of the lumber cargo. HARBOR NEEDS STATED OLYHPIA CHAMBER SUBMITS DATA TO GOVERNMENT ENGINEER. gnoO.OOO Sought From Congress for Deepening and Widening Channels to Accommodate Bis; Shlpa, OL.YMP1A. Wash, Oct. 30 (Special.) Voluminous data to show the need of appropriations by Congress at the coming session, of - 8500000 for the im provement of OlyropLa harbor, have been, prepared by the Olympia Cham ber of Commerce and forwarded to Colonel J. B. Cavanaugh, United States Engineer, who has been detailed to re port upon the feasibility of the project. The improvement desired is the deep ening of the main channel to accom modate deep water vessels of 30 feet draft, the v.idening of the channel to 1000 feet und the deepening of the south channel to accommodate off shore vessels. JJata. gatnerea oy tne (.narooer shows that within a territory bounded by a line drawn from Oakvllle, 24 miles west of Olympia; Meskill, 43 miles southwest; Napavine, 37 miles south, and Dupont, 17 miles north, lumber from inland mills can be han dled to better advantage through Olym pia than through Willapa Harbor, Grays Harbor, or any Columbia River or other Puget Sound port. Statistics showing the growth of the capital in the fast 10 years and Its potential commercial importance also are in cluded. P. H. Carlyon, State Senator, repre senting the O.-W. R. & N., which is completing its line into Olympia, has written a letter stating that hiB clients will build a 600-foot double track dock, with ample storage fa cilities, if the projected harbor im provement work is done. Hbtlce to Mariners. Latest of the Bureau of Lighthouses publications contain the following in formation bearing on changes in aids to navigation in the Seventeenth Light house District: Columbia River entrance Columbia Bar Dredging Range Lights discontin ued, October 12. Formerly maintained by the U. S. engineers. Juan de Fuca Strait Neah Bay Gas and Whistling Buoy, 2. Characteristic of light changed, October 16, to flash ing red every 3 seconds, flash 0.8 sec ond duration, of 120 candlepower. Without other change. Marine Notes. San Francisco advices quote John Kosslter. manager of W. R. Grace & Co., who ns ..h f-nm .w York, as saying m the Mimnanv h purchased the pacific xTair f it oncatea in the Central ana South American tsrvlc. What is said to be the first yellow pine log raft towed hern arrived Friday night from Hamilton Creek, opposite "Warrenton, in tow of one of the Shaver ateamerc. It contains 100,000 feet and was gotten out by the J. K. LoKKing Company. Oregon lir is commonly referred to as Oregon pine. Superintendent Hoadley. of the Seven teenth Lighthouse District. haa returned from an Inspection yip up the Columbia as far as Crusher, where he passed on navi gation aids in place and arranged to estao lish others. During this week old structures and lights will be overhauled and new ones placed. , . To complete their cargoes with lumber the steamers Daisy Gadsby and Shasta went to Westport vesterday. The Wapama sailed for California with a number of passengers and full cargo. ' It the Norwegian bark Musselcrag reaches here from Valparaiso in March she receives a rate of 92s Cd, and April loading is to net her 90 shillings. The vessel was char tered Friday by Strauss & "Co. She is on the way fron Leith for the West Coast harbor. , News from the Canal zone is to the effect that the British steamers Volga and Snow. T donian. wheat laden from Portland, got un der way trora Balboa for the United King dom Friday by way of -the Straits of Ml- Brlnglng 830 tons of carpo. most of which Is merchandise, the Parr-McGormlek steam er Celilo is due today. A. B John, who was here looking after the dispatch of the British steamer Queen Maud In the interests of James Wardle & Co., left last nisht with Mrs. John aboard the vessel for Australia, On her way to therWest roaet from Portland the steamer Melville Dollar ar rived at San Francisco at 6 o'clock yester day morning. MARINE INTELLIGENCE. Steamer Schedule. DUE TO ARRIVB. From Data . Name. Beaver Santa Clara. ... ureat Northern Hoanoke ..... V A K-llburn . . ..Los Angeles. ... ..In port , ta Franclioo. ... Oct 81 . . San Francisco. ... Oct. , . Ban Diego. ...... .Oct. ..fito Francisco. ... Nov. HI Northern Fadflo. . .Sen FrsaclKo . rov. Hose City. o.oi Angelas. . Oeo W. JClder. .... -8an Diego. ...... .Nov. f Bear. -. - .Los Angeles. .... .Nov. 8 DUB TO DEPAHT. Kama. For Data Wapama ....Ban Diego ...Oct. S bania Clara. ...... .San Francisco. ... Oct. 81 Multnomah. ...... .Ban Diego. ..... Nov. 1 1:.-.., Knhrn San Francisco. ... Nov. 1 Beaver .los Angelee Nov. F. A. Kllburn. ... ..San Franeuoo. ,. . Nov. Roanoke. ...... Ean Diego. ...... ..Nov. Northern Pacific. ..&an Francisco. ...Nov. Rom City J.os Angelas Nov. Ceo. W. Elder fan Diego Nov. Bear. .Los Angeles. .... .Nov. j. B. Stetson Ban Diego ...Nov. Klamath San Diego Nov. 10 Portland-Atlantic Service. SVI TO ARB1VC Kama. From Data. Santa Cecelia. New York Deo. 6 Ion r .riw inr uml 11 Pintmin. . iweniuckiao. New York. ...... -Dec. .Nfaw York reb. DUB TO DEP1BT, Name. For Santa. Cecelia. New York. loaan . .. ...... ...New York. . . ...Deo. 10 ...Dee. 1 .. Dee. Itii Pan a man. Joew York Kentucklan New York. Fo. Movements of Vessels. PORTLAND, Oct. 30. Arrived Steamers W. F. H err in, from Monterey ; J apanese steamer Hokoku Maru. from Adelaide. Sailed Steamers Wapama, for San Pedro via San Francisco; Shasta, tor San Pedro via Westport; Daisy Gads b v. for San Fran cisco via Westport; Stanley Dollar, for Val paraiso ; British steamer Queen Maud, for Sydney; Schooner Hugh Hogan. for Shang- i; steamer W. F. llerrln, tor San Fran cisco. Astoria. Oct. 30. Arrived at 1:30 and left up at 10. A. M. Japanese steamer Hokoku Maru. from Adelaide. Sailed at '2:15 P. M. fateamer Northern Pacific, for San Francisco. san Francisco. Oct. ao. sailed at 3 A. M, Steamer Santa Malca. for Columbia River. Arrived at 0 A. M. Steamer Melville Dol lai from Portland for West Coast. Sailed A. M. Steamer losemite. for Portland Arrived at 8 A. M. Steamer Geo. W. Elder. from Portland for San Diego via way ports. Arrived Steamer Doris. from Portland. sailed at 11 A. M. Steamer Great Northern, for Flavel. Sailed at noon Steamer F. A. Kllburn, for Portland via way ports. Oct. 29. Sailed at 10:80 P. M. Steamer Johan Pouisen, for Portland. Coos Bay. Oct. 30. Sailed at 7 A. M. Steamer Santa Clara, from San Francisco ana fcurexa ror Portland. Arica, Oot. 29. Arrived Steamer TMrar n. unce, irora rornana via way ports. Balboa. Oct. 29. Sailed Rrttlsh tonrrMrB Pnowdonian and Volga, from Portland for unitea ivingaom via Magellan. toeattie. oci. su. Arrived stmr Tt from San Francisco : Prince Ruoert. Brit ish, from Prince Rupert. Sailed Steamers Admiral Schley, for San Francisco; Prince Rupert, British, for Prince Rupert. san Francisco. Oct. 30 Arriv.rf Rtims-a Panama Mum. Jnpanese from Honekona: Melville Dollar. from Astoria.: Clnn W Elder, from Portland; Doris, from Columbia River; Lyman Stewart, from Port Angeles. Sailed Steamers Great Northern. Santa M on Ira. for Astoria China, for h -n c v nn m President, for Seattle: San Jacinto fnr r.r.v. .Harbor; Yosemlte. F. A. Kllburn. for Port land. Marconi Wireless Reports. All noftitinns remtrtrd m.t ft P. M. 0nKi 30. unlcrtH otherwises rieH.imn.ted. St. Helens. Caleda Bueanoa for San Fran cisco, 677 miles south of San Francisco. Newport. San Francisco for Balboa. 1S73 miles south -of San Francisco. Northland. San Pedro for San Francisco. 20 miles west of San Pedro. Speedwell, San Francisco for San Pedro. 258 miles south of San Francisco. Queen. San Francisco for San Pedro, five miles west of Point Firm in. Honolulu. San Pedro for Charleston. S C. . 1810 miles south of San Pedro. Rose City. San Pedro for San Francisco, la niiles e-ist of Point Conception. Porter, Point Wells for San Francisco. 686 miles north of San Francisco. Atlas, towing bars-a 91, Richmond for Port land, 20 miles north Yaquina Head. ;ania Liara. loos sav for fortlana. 40 miles south of Columbia River. Ceulo. San Francisco for Portland. 25 miles south of Columbia River. Roanoke. San Francisco for Portland. 147 miles south of Columbia River. Graco Dollar. San Francisco for Tacoma, 50r miles north of San Francisco. Klamath, Portland for San Francisco, 10 miles south of Yaquina Head. C'hanslor. Monterey for Everett. 627 miles north of Monterey. Lurline. Honolulu for San Francisco, 113!$ miles out October I'D. El Peg-undo. Richmond for Kahului, 1288 miles frjm Richmor.d. October 29. Manoa, S.in Frsncisco for Honolulu, 915 mile out. October 29. 1 Hyades, Seattle for Honolulu, 876 miles from Cape Flattery. October Ji. Buck. Honolulu for Seattle, 931 miles from Honolulu. October 29. Pesouielra. Seattle for Honolulu, 33 miles from Cape Flattery, October 29. Kllburn. San Francisco for Eureka, t5 miles north of Point Reyes. Aroline, San Pedro for San Francisco, off Point Sur Yosemit. San Francisco for Portland off Point Arena. President, -San Francisco for Seattle, 45 miles north of Point Reyes. Bear. Portland for San Francisco, 87 miles north of Point Arena. Great Northern, San Francisco for Flavel, elcht miles north of Blunt's Reef Adeline Smith, San Francisco for Coos Bav. five miles north of San Francisco. China. Ran Francisco for Orient, 42 miles from San Francisco Drake. Richmond for Seattle, 360 miles north Richmond Governor from Victoria off Cape Blanco. Tide at Astoria Sua day. TT!Th. Low. 7:2S A. M 6.3 fea10:S6 A. M 1.2 feet 6.2$ P. M.....C7 lee til: 00 P.' M..I- .4,2, feet Local Inspectors Receive Instruc tions From Washington Which Modify Interpretation Placed TTpon Seaman's Taw. As November 4 approaches, tha date fixed for the new seamen's law to ap ply to American vessels, official Wash ington appears to be discarding- many of the restrictions originally woven about the measure, some of which promised to tie Government steamboat inspectors in their offices for many moons in trying: to straigrhten out en tanglements. - The most recent verdict from In spector-General Uhler, of the United States Steamboat Inspection Service, reaching; Inspectors Edwards and Ful ler yesterday, is that men who have had three years' experience on the Great Lakes or at sea, are not required to undergo a practical examination In the work of a sailor, such as boxing: the compass, splicing:, lowering; and i pulling a boat, and such things. There were about TO men here ready to undergo the new ordeal, all having made format application for examina tion, but only one who has applied ad mits less than three years' service, he having- been before the mast 12 months, so examinations that were to have taken place at 10 o'clock tomorrow aboard the cruiser Boston have been given up and the Ion applicant will be sent through his paces later. Another telegram reaching here yes terday, received by Collector of Cus toms Burke from the Department of Commerce, eliminates tha language test in certain cases, the message reading as follows: "No examination under language test is required by section 13 of the sea men's act or by the department regu lations if the Collector of Customs is satisfied upon statement of master or otherwise that his crew fulfills requires ments of section 13. It is sufficient if the collector thinks a muster is neces sary or is required to have one made on complaint. Then department cir cular 265 must be followed, it being specially noted that obedience to orders given by their officers In usual line of duty Is the test required. , Shipping men are waiting the out come of the enforcement of the law as to equipment to be carried on vessela Notice has been given that the pro visions will -be enforced to the letter, and marine men declare that in some cases it will mean steamers will be virtually smotherec. wi.h lifeboats and must ca-'ry much 'more boatage than will be required, as they are equipped at present on a basis of 10 cubic feet of boatage for each person carried. Xewa From Oregon Ports. COOS BAT. Or.. Oct. 30. (SDeclal.l The steamship Santa Clara due to sail for Portland last nleht at 8, left .port today at A H The crredg-e iattie. beiongrtna to the Puiet Sound Bridge & Dredge Comnanv. is being- prepared for being towed to her MARSHFIELD WOMAN USES CAMERA FOR RECORD OF STEAMSHIP VOYAGE. 3 . - ft:- ?vi .V: XT' ".v c r - i .: - ,!-.- ..j. ; - : : i : : - - MARSHFIELD, Or., Oct. 30. (Special.) A Marshfield woman. Mrs. P. J. Cattrall. wife of Chief Engineer Cactr all, of the new steamer William O'Brien, accompanied the vessel, which had d elivered an Eastern cargo at Puget Sound and returned through the Cana 1 with Puget Sound lumber one week before the enormous Gold Hill slide 1 n September, which blocked the water way. On the journey through the Can al, Mrs. Cattrall worked her camera incessantly, and obtained many fine v lews of the Canal and adjoining places of interest, which she forwarded to Mar shfield with stories of her experiences. Mrs. Catrall will make her home i n Florida for the Winter, since her husband will be engaged between the F lorida coast and New York City on the steamer O'Brien, which belongs to i fruit firm owning & large line of steam ships. In writing home Mrs. Cattral 1 said the crew of the William O'Brien felt they had been very fortunate to r each the Canal before the slide, as the congestion, even when the waterway Is again opened, will prevail for several weeks, as it Is estimated there will b e more than 300 vessels waiting to be locked through, when the dredgers ha v the way. cleared. , STEAMER CHINA SAILS American-Chinese to Compete at Sea With Japanese. OREGOMAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington, Oct. 30. The Japanese are not to have a monopoly of trans-Pacific shipping, according to the Department of Commerce, but soon will meet active Chinese competition. Recent reports to the Department of Commerce Indicated that the Japanese, being virtually in control, intended to operate their ocean liners primarily for the benefit of Jap anese trade, and that it was their pur pose, when more freight was offered than could be handled, to give first preference to goods shipped from or to Japan, leaving behind Chinese and oth er Oriental shipments. The announce ment of tha formation of a new Chin ese company, as made by the Depart ment of Commerce, says: The China Mall Steamship Company, fi nanced wholly by Chineae in the United States, haa beea organised on the Pacific Coast, for traffio between San Francisco and China. A telegram from Commercial Agent E. G. Babbitt, at San Francisco, to the Bureau of Foreign and Domeatio Commerce, announces that the former Pacifio Mail lin er China, which has been secured by toe new company, will Inaugurate tha service with a sailing today. Mr. Babbitt reports that the capital of the China Mail Steamship Company la '-'.-100.000. Besides acquiring the China the company is said to hold options on other steamships. Mr. Look Tin Ell. president of the Canton Bank of San Francisco, has been active In the negotiations that preceded the formation of the China Mall Company. The original plan called for the ca-operatlon of Chinese cn both aides of the ocean. San Francisco Chinese, however, have intimated that they preferred to have the project financed in this country. Columbia River Bar Report. NORTH HEAD. Oct. 3a Condition of the bar at sS P. M.; Sea rough; wind southeast 6i miles. TRAIN BUCKLES INTO CREEK Eleven Empty Freight Cars Plunge From Tacoma -Aberdeen 'Flyer. ABERDEEN. Wash.. Oct. 30. (Spe cial.) Eleven empty cars attached to the Milwaukee fast freight from Ta coma to Aberdeen plunged Into De lezene Creek, near Saginaw, 2e miles east of here, at 5 o'clock this morning and now lie there In a mass of wreck age 20 feet high. . Traffic will be in convenienced for probably two days, and meanwhile passengers are being transferred around the wreckage. Freight trains of the O.-W. R. & N. road and the Milwaukee road are com ing part of the way into Grays Harbor on the Northern Pacific tracks. A brake-beam is believed to have knocked one freight car's trucks off the track and when this car struck the bridge the cars Jackknifed and plunged Into the ravine, carrying tha bridge with them. No one waa injured as far as known. Western river banks are protected from erosion by mattresses of willows held down by weights of stone. . . Belief Is Held That Regular Sf-r-ice Has Besun Portland Cerxnl Trade tor October Ieads ' Sound by 147,398 Bushels. With the nrst lot of paper that may be included anions the regular exports from Portland for Australia, the Brit ish steamer Queen Maud, sailing in the service of James 'Wardle & Co., of Mel bourne, srot away last night with cargo for Sydney and Melbourne. Paper freight alone, amounting to 1650 tons, was valued at $74,260, and other ship ments Increased the valuation to 179.500. In the way of lumber the vessel took cargo measuring SI. 000 feet, valued at 910. with 1120 bundles of shingles at $490 and two crates f doors appraised at $10, completed the lumber list. In addition-there were 640 cases of salmon. listed at 13840. There are two other steamers listed from Australia for San Francisco in the same service, but it haa not been determined whether they will make Portland. The Queen Maud had considerable cargo that was taken on at Stn Francisco, and it is assumed In some quarters that she may be the leader of a fairly regular service. Other I a tr rears Look: la. There are other interests looking to the Portland field as a desirable con nection with an Australian line, and if that la determined on the first vessel is to be here early next year. Another steamer entered the river yesterday, the Japanea tramp Hokoko Maru. which hails from Adelaide and is under engagement to Balfour. Outhrle & Co. to load cereal for the United Kingdom. She is of 3124 tons net regis ter, and on reporting here last night ended a long voyage, which began at New York June 29. She steamed by way of St. Vincent and Port Natal to Fremantle and Adelaide. The departure of the Norwegian ship Xordsee yesterday for London, loaded with wheat, and the steamer Stanley Dollar getting away for South Amer ica with wheat and fiuor cleaned up cereal tonnage for the month, which olosed with a total wheat movement to foreign and domestic ports of 1.533.598 buahels, a falling off as compared with 2.267.063 bushels handled for the same month last year. The principal dif ference was in the European exports, 836.611 bushels being dispatched, while last October the total was 1,462,260 bushels. Canal Delays Shlpa. The failure to make a better showing was due to the closing of the Panama Canal, as there is considerable tonnage on the way around that would have loaded here during the month. There was a slight decrease in South African and In the California deliveries. For the season Portland has floated 4,770,347 bushels, and for the same period last year the showing was 4.706.737 bushels. Flour shipments for the month to all ports were 87,695 barrels, and for the corresponding month last year were 87,784 barrels. So far this season 302. 033 barrels have been dispatched, and last October there had been 256,837 barrela Puget Soured wheat shipments were 803,977 bushels, and a year ago were 1.704.047 bushels. For the season that district has floated 2.632.460 bushels, and the first four months of the pre ceding season was credited with 3,593. 634 bushels. Flour cleared on Puget Sound reached 221,744 barrels, a gain over last October, when 221.392 were loaded. Wheat and flour shipments for the Northwest for October, flour re duced to wheat measure, aggregated 3.749.048 bushels, of which Portland shipped 1,048,223 bushels, leading Puget Sound by 147,398 bushels. DAILY METEOROLOGICAL REPORT. PORTLAND Oct. 30. Maximum tempera ture 57 degrees; minimum 48 degrees. River reading S A. M-, 0.8 foot: chance in last 24 hours, 0.3 toot fall Total rainfall (5 P. M. to 5 P. M.). .09 Inch: total rainfall since September 1. 8.47 Inches: normal rainfall since September 1. 3.37 Inches: deficiency of rainfall since September-1, i.fto inches. Total sunshine. 30 minutes; poestble sunhina, lo hours 12 minutes. Barometer (reduced to aea level). 5 P. M.. 3U.04 Inches. THE WEATHER. STATIONS State of Weather Baker IHV0.00I.JN tCIoudy 60 0. 00t. .INW Cloudy 6S 0.0'i'U W 'Pt. cloudy -JS 0.1O NWiCloudy f.- 0.00 14IS (Clear 7.; o.oo;. .lis ciourty T o.Ott;. .is pt. ciouay " 0.0014 NE Iciear ,V o.uol. .JNW'Clear 54 0.00 . JPE Clear f oo.oo IS W pt. cloudy U.0014!E Clear S.0.00 018 Clear 7 0.00,. .ISW (Clear fi'l O.OTf . . SW 'Coiudv CS 0.00' . . 'N Pt cloudy 70 0.002?.S 'Pt. cloud 4S 0.04 '.'4 NW PL cloudy 0.00'. .IN JCIear iV4 0.00 4fl NW Clear 54 0.18 MifSE 'Rain Bois Boston Calgary C htcago Denver ....... Des Moinen . . . Duluth Eureka Galveston Helena Jacksonville Kansas City I..OS An seles . . . Marshfield Med ford Minneapolis Montreal New Orleans . . New Y iirk North Head . . North Yakima . Phoenix Pocatello Portland Roseburff Sacramento . .- St. Louis Fait Luke an Francisco . Seattle Spokane Tacoma Tatoosh Inland Walla Walla . . Washington Winnipeg .... 8'0.00u.:fiW Clear 60 O.OKI. .(SW Cloudy 57 O.ort, . .;s Cloudy O.Oo! . . S Cloudy 70 0.00'. .!S Clear 7i0.00!24PE Clear 70 0.00 . .NW Clear 62 O .00 14 W Clear iW ClOiirSS Rain ! 5O0.00I. .IW Cloudy I 54 0.0S1 . .IS Rain 52 0.7-J i0 E Rain ' 3t 0.0o!..;PW Cloudy 6-JO.Oti'. . INW Clear ...f 5S0.0O 14iE !Pt. cloudy WEATHER CONDITIONS. A storm of considerable energy fs ap proaching; Vancouver la and and southeast warnings for same were ordered at the mouth of the Columbia River at 2:30 P. M. and extended to the remaining seaports in Western Washington at a:o0 P. M. Late this afternoon a maximum wind velocity of 0O miles southeast occurred at North Head, Wash. Light rain has fallen along the Ore gon Coast and tn Western Washington. ( Lower Lake Region and New England States. It was snowing at 5 P. M. at Bar kerville. B. C. Conditions are favorable for rain Sunday In Western Oregon. Washington and North ern Idaho. The weather will be cloudy and threatening over Sunday In Eastern Oregon and Southern Idaho. FORECASTS. Portland and vicinity: Sunday, rain; fresa southerly winds. Oregon : Sunday, rain west, cloudy and. threatening east portion: high southerly winds along the north coaat and increasing southerly winds Interior. Washington: Sunday, rain: fresh southerly gale along the Coast and moderate southerly gale inierior west portion. Idaho: 1 und ay, cloudy and threatening, with rain north portion. EDWARD A. DEALS. Forecaater. United Cigar Man Leaves. J. Wolf mar, who has been In charge of the United Cigar Company's chain of stores in this city during? the past 17 months, has been promoted and tn future will have charge of thQ field which includes Oakland, San Jose, Stockton, Sacramento and Fresno, Cal. Mr. Wolf man will make his headquar ters at Oakland and will leave here for that city Monday..