s 7 Iff IIS SilV . Mi 1'HJS MUUNJNO ASTOHIaN. KII1DAY NOVKMBKK 10. JK9D. Iffl THE great rush of people to take advantage ol our extraordinary offers in uncalled for suits and overcoats has been marvelous from the very beginning. The popularity of these suits has become so great that we have been compelled to open correspondence with over one hundred of the largest Tail oring concerns throughout the country in order to get these suits faat enough to supply the enormous demand. These are not misfits, but suits made to order on which deposits have been paid and which for unkown reasons remained uncalled for. Such things happen to every Tailoring establish estaUishment. It is by advertising and making a feature of selling these suits that they find it more advantageoia to consign them to us than to attempt to dispose of them from their own establishments. ( Uncalled for Garments at Half Price. $20.00 Suits and Overcoats, $10.00 $26.00 Suits and Overcoats, $12.60 $30.00 Suits and Overcoats, $16.00 $36.00 Suits and Overcoats, $17 60 $40.00 Suits and Overcoats, $20.00 These garments are so lar superior in style, fit and finish to ready-made cloth ing that comparisons are odious. Call and examine them and see if we can fit you.T Suits to rder We make suits to order from 5.00to$ 15 cheaper than any other first-class tailoring establishment in Portland. . .' . We are Tailors, Bear That in Mind Not cheap garment makers, the only thing cheap about our suits is the price. Our suits have that style fit and finish about them that well-dressed gentle men appreciate. Astorians are cordially invited to call and inspect our goods whether they buy or not: FarnrMerald Til I (rh ailoring Oompanv, 250 Washington Street, PORTtAND, OREGON EMPEROR WILLIAM'S CHANGE OF POLICY lie Seeks an Alliance With Ens land and America. EITKIT OP OIK ELECTIONS Europe Given to Understand There Must lie No Intervention h South Africa A Series of Theatricals. NEW V011IC, Nov. 9.-A dispatch lo tho Tribune from London nays: Tne Oninm emperor liiu airaln iuo (coded In commanding tho attention o( Europu and lnorwuliir his wnnonal printlgo and Influence. Ht nwlvod yvsterday lit Potsdam, with pomp, tiitolliM-8 and cordlulity, tint rtuf and v.iirlrm of KuhMii, who had boin visit ing their relations In Hesse, and there vw conference ltweii Count Mu ravleff and lw German chancellor and th(r hlh dignitaries of MaXv. Thcso courtesies were a concession to the old Hi-haul of diplomacy, which, then trained by Ulnmurck, believed that the blithest Interests of Germany wore promoted by a (food understanding and ox-ret agreements with Husslo, The day nxod for this mating of the two sovereigns was also chuwn for th nlllclal announcement of various secret arrangemonts mado with FJngUuid made In advance of tho German em peror's vlBlt to the queen. These In cludo tho renunciation of English rights In Mamoa In favor of Germany. Compensations for England were foutiil In the cetwlon of two easterly Islands of the Solomon group and the abandonment of German rights In the Tonga group and Savage. Islands, the abolition of Q9nnan consular Jurisdic tion In Zanzibar and an arrangement for the delimitation of British and German frontiers In the Hinterland of Togoland. These exchanges of territory o,nd jur isdiction are too intricate to be under stood except by experts of the Royal Geographical Society, although the leading writers make a brave attempt to explain them In today's London Journal. .What Is of the highest lg nlflisnce Is the evident that England nd Germany or heartily In accord and "tu ruling by ouch other. No diplomatist believes that tho I1T lln announcement, confirmed by the foreign oflloe hero. Is a complete dls cloture of th w'iit ugreement be tween England and Germany. The 1 deepest things ore still univveuled, I but enough Is laid bare to prove that Lord Salisbury has secure! a free hand In South Africa nJid the co-oeratlon of Germany In preventing European Intrigue or Intervnrtlon while the Ilrltlsh army I fighting a great battle In a remote quarter of the empire. The German emiHTor has become England's ally, and he allows the world to know It on the day when he em brace the csar and drinks his health. He also Justifies the elaborate prepa ration made by the royal family 'or welcoming him to England, with the Duke of Comiaught and the Duke of York to nalute him at Sheerness, with the Prince of Wale to meet him at the niatlon at Windsor, wWh the queen herself to stand at tho head of the grand staircase with the portraits of his grandfather and father to look down upon him from the wills of the famous tapestry room and wilh all England outside ready to proclaim him k royal friend and sturdy ally the name England that was euger to have war with Germany four years ago. Another coincident which does not escape observation hero Is that this revelation of diplomatic secrets Is made ithe day after the American elections, In which the purty In power has se cured a general .verillot of popular approval. Diplomatists here assume with confidence thit England has not sacrificed American friendship or In terest)! In the Siimoan settlement and that the partition of territory between the United States and Germany has received the sanction of the three powers concerned In tho tripartite con vention, which has ceuaed to be a practical method of governing the group. Leader writers for the press take this view, and also forecast a hearty Ger man co-operation in the state depart ment' new p.illcy requiring European guarantees for an open door In the far east and equality of commercial privi leges for all maritime nations. This view la justified by the latest dispatches from IUtIIii. Everything, Indeed, points to the full accord of the three powers In all these arrangements. The German emperor was warned lout year that his altKudo toward America has helped to bring the United States and England Into close and friendly relations, and has made approaches to both, and the threw greatest Industrial and commercial nations of the world are now brought Into a circle of good feeling and common liittreuls without a formal convention or an entangling alliance. ATKINSON'S IDEA OF THE ELECTION ADMINISTRATION A MINORITY But He Thinks It Inexpedient to Con tinue the I'ublicntion of the "Anti Impcriullst" nnd Kill Shut Up Shop. BOSTON, Nov. 9. Edward Atkinson, In an Interview regarding the results of the recent elections, sold: ' It Is too early yet! to draw any con clusions from the election as affecting the antl-lmperialist cause, but there is one conclusion quite apparent, espec ially In Ohio. The administration Is In a minority. "If the efforts to subjugate the Philippine Islands should drag on un til the next election, which I very much doubt, all members of congr.1 of eith er party who support criminal aggres sion will be defeated In Ohio and also In other states, "I anticipate a great change In the conduct of affairs by the administra tion, but, lest It should not come, the dominant minority now opposing the policy of the administration under the name of anti-Imp rallts will control the next house of representatives. "About Massachusetts, there is not much to say. The character and well known opinions of Governor Crane are all In his favor, ills cordial support of Senator Hoar Is well assured, and thew has bosn no special opposition o the part of the anti-lmperUMsta to his election." Mr. Atkinson said that he would ceaM Hie publication of the Antl-lmpe-rlallst after the national accounts are rendered on January 1 on the cost o "criminal aggression." He added: "Tim violation of the mall will lie In vestigated In the senate. The neces sity for further Individual action has ceased. The antl-lmperlailsts are now organized on a national scale, and It would bo neither expedient nor suitable for me, as an Individual, to divert funds or to continue a personal contest under existing conditions. "I haw made a final , statement, which It at your service, having put Into circulation over 100,000 documents, where I expected to circulate 2.000. So much I owe to the members of the cabinet who slandered me and violated the malk" arrived at Mare Island enroute to the Philippines for shore duty si Cavlte. WH EATON AT DAGUPAN. MANILA, Nov. 9. General Whea ton's expedition to the north of Luzon landed at Dagupan on Tuesday. Two of the Anverlcans were wounded. The expedition Is advancing eastward. FREEBORN & CO. DEALERS IX ANOTHER BIG WHALE CRCISE. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 9. The whal ing bark Andrew Hicks has arrived from the Okhtsk Sea with 9500 pounds of wholebone, 61S barrels of whale oil and forty-seven barrels of sperm oil. On May 5, First Mate Nevis harpooned a large howhead, but a blow from the whale's tall smashed the beat. First Mate Winchester went to the assis tance of Nevis and his men and not only rescued them, but also captured the whale. SHIPWRIGHT'S STILL OUT. MARE ISLAND, CALIF., Nov. 9 Tho striking shipwrights ftt the navy yard are still out. A committee of the men held a conference today with Com mandant Kemff, who stated that It wo," not In his power to permit them to re turn to finish up their work on the Hartford until he hod received instruc tions from the navy department. THE NEW YORK MAJDRITV. NEW YORK. Nov. 9.-On the basis of the vote cast In the 150 assembly districts, the' republicans carry the state by a plurality of 11.854. according to the Herald's figures. Roosevelt's plurality lost year was 17,785. MARINES FOR MANILA. VALLEJO. CrX, Nov. 9-The Third battalion of United States marines, con sisting of 150 officers and 320 men, has MACHINE 13 TO FIRE ENGINES. Indluna Man's Device May Oust All Locomotive Firemen. A device has been Invented by a resi dent of Indianapolis which Is expeoled to work a revolution in the matter of firlne- enelnes on railroad trains. It will soon be givan a teat by the Penn sylvania Company wtth a view to using It on that system. The device has not yet been patented, and for that reason the name of the Investor Is withheld; for the present for the public. The work of the machine Is to throw cool into the firebox of on engine and evenly distribute it, and Is so arranged that the engineer, by turning a little wheel, can place the coal In the firebox at the rate of about twenty-one cubic feet In a second. This work Is now done by the flre.nan with a shovel, who throws about twenty pounds at a time. - The machine has been tried end has been found to work perfectly, and It Is thought that It will solve the problem of poor firing of engines and do awav with fire.iien entirely. Super intendent Mansfield of the Pennsyl vania Company has examined the ma chine and savs that there appears to b? nothing In the way of Its accomplish ment of the end for which It Is designed. A Portland Buyer Mrs. DALTON, who has had years' of experience ns a Buyer . Wall Paper and Room Mouldings Gypsinc, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, etc. Plain and Decorative Paper Hanging. House and Fresco Painters, Etc. 343 Washington St., Portland, Ore. Telephone Red 1955. Will bo pleased to give persona attention to nil customer. Correspondence solicited. 363 Second St., Portland. POYEV & BIRCHALL TAILORS Fin. work at Poptlnr Prices. 3 27 Washington Streett Next Imperial Hotel PORTLAND, ORB. J. 0. Gillcn G Co., Dealers, Manufacturers srd Contractors Of Asbestos Boiler and Pipe Coverings 229 Second St, PORTLAND, ORE. B. F. Allen & Son House in Wall Paper, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Brushes, Etc. No House Can Beat Our Prices. 365 Commercial St. 1 CUT PRICES DAVID II ARUM, $1.50, our Cut Prioo ..$1.15 KIDHARD CARVEL, $1.50, our Cut Price ... 1.15 JANICE MEREDIN, new book by Paul Leicester Ford, $1.50. our Cut Price. 1.15 WITH KITCHENER TO KHARTUM, W, II. Stevens, $1 .50 onr Cut Price 1.15 We will meet any Cut Price on any book made bjr any house in Hie world. Send us your orders. Jones' Book Store, 291 Alder St., bet. 4th aud 5th, PORLLAND, CBEGQN. jlg,ia0tfllBl3Hg!a(lil8,!aiiai m i 1 E-9 m m I