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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1902)
t THE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1902. THE KIND YOU HAVE ALWAYS BOUGHT In Use For Over Thirty Years. GENUINE A. VcgetableTrcparationfor As similating theTood and Reg ula ting theStaaachs andBowels of egefablcPxeparationforAs simiiating theFoodandRegula ting theStomachs andBowels c I li III M III II H I HlHi prflfmi'iiiMMwimiiwmHnwiwi!WiipmiiMiMMiiti( PromofesTHgestion.Checrful "ness andRsstContams neither Opium,Morpliine uorljlkieral. Not NAe.c otic. JbJOeSJtt jfuinSeetl ffenpfced Garilitd Saga-. A perfect Remedy forConstipa tiorwSour Storaach.Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness OTidLoss OF StEER TacSinule Signature oE NEW -YORK. pik nr .ft ITS tl V k W ban npn .Aft im 4 tutu tn v m hn ....m.iii r . ,. iTif -yt BTfttm i,ffiifTM,.-,..j.i -r..;..... V.v. .Z...:- ...J-.-.-.r.r-v.ii ,...Vrj;.wi1,-'- For Infants and Children BEARS THE SIGNATURE OF EXACT COPY-OTAVBAPPEB. w Promotes IHesHon,Cheerful ness andRest.Contains neither OpninDSorphina nor Mmeral. Not NLac otic; Majx GfOlgXt-SAMUELFirCEER Rmpfan StttZ. Abc.Scnnt JftQu&ais&Ssdo' fKrwtSttii Ctanfitd Sugar . Aperfecf Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stonuich.Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP.. Facsimile SignaturcoE NEW "YORK. EXACT C0P5OPWHA!?JEB".. ALL 'HEADED EOR OREGON "WILLIS XASHT SAYS EASTERX FARM ERS ARE LOOKING WEST. Great Good Derived Prom Railroad Activlty-State Should Prepare to Welcome Immigrants. CHICAGO, Nov. 3. (To the Editor.)-It is a matter of great interest to the people of Oregon to be advised of the practical working of the great scheme of immigra tion organizing and promotion which lias" been set In motion by the Harriman rail roads. The advance rlpplee of the tide be gan to reach Oregon in the last Summer and present Fall, but unless every indica tion is at fault and every reasonable pre diction falsified, people will look in won der at the great wave already beginning to collect Its momentum which will spread over in Oregon in 1S03. I found its first in dications In Omaha, where the intimation v that the writer was an old resident of OrS. gon was the signal for persistent ques tioning by farmers and stockmen In the hotels, then crowded by the attendants from the surrounding country at the car nival in progress. Real estate men and railroad agents all sang thfe same song, "Look out for the people in 1903." (In parenthesis let me slip In a compliment for Portland, and the Oregon Elks: The Omaha carnival was better lighted at night; the electric illumination was splen did; but for elegance in exhibits pure fun In the crowds, general Interest In the dis plays and for the show of beauty and brightness of the girls, Omaha wasn't In It with Portland.) Iy next stop was in Minneapolis. Here we were off the direct line, but lots of Dakota and Minnesota people were in the beautiful city, and from so many of them came the familiar words: "I am selling out this Fall, getting good price for my land (?50 to $50 per acre), and mean try ing a milder climate, where we hear the land is just asgood." Then on to Chicago, where is the heart and center of the rail- Toad effort. A large office at 23S South Clark street, among 'the railroad offices and hotels, is ruled over by Mr. G. M. McKinney as general Immigration agent of the Southern Pacific Railroad, Union Pacific Railroad. Oregon Short Line Railroad and O. R. & N. Co.. with a good force of as sistants, from C. MacKenzle downward, and they are all hard at work. A first class exhibit of Hood River apples, filling the window, gathers a (crowd from early morn to as late in the evening as I have passed it. Inelde are displayed more-apples from Hood River, Baker City, Med ford and Grant's Pass, and a small show of fine fruit from the recent Lincoln County Fair at Toledo. Bottled and pre served fruits of all kinds from Linn and "Washington Counties complete the fruit display. Grasses, grains, clovers, -alfalfa, arranged on" the walls attract wondering eyes. Large and faultless potatoes, beets, carrots, etc. from Northeastern Oregon and Southeastern Washington and from Loncoln County. Oregon, close the show of perishable products. A fine collection ol grains of all sorts from the State Ag ricultural College at Corvallls stands In numberless-bottles on shelves on the other side of the room. The object-lesson of this fine collection most surely gains Its end. For two weeks past I have spent all the time I could spare from my busi ness in this room, anfl we have had what may fairly be called, a continuous Oregon reception. It is true that the crowd that fills the room from 12 to 1 is largely com posed of curious Inquirers from the clerks and salesmen of the city. Among them Is many a one tired of city employments, desiring a free l.fe, country opportunities, wholesome surroundings and the chances of growing up with a young state of the Pacific West, -and Inquiring and planning how the sum total of the little savings of many years may serve for the beginning wages and chances of employment in the West, but to every one the ideal Is the 5 or 10 acres of land In the outskirts of the town, with Its fruit trees and chickens and flowers, for the word has gone out about Oregon's roses In the dooryards and Oregon wild flowers in the Springtime pas tures. But for the rest of the day, from early morning till dark, come in the farm er, frultraiser and stockman. These men know exactly what questions to ask. These quiet, self-contained business farm ers of the Middle West in the Chicago office are the first fruits of .the railroads' invitations to go West. Their farms in Illinois, Iowa, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Indiana and Kansas have quadrupled in value in 20-years. If Oregon cannpt only attract, but hold these men till they enter their names on the roll of her citizens, the railroads will have done thje state a serv ice, in inviting them, never to be repaid, and going very far to obliterate forever the rehiembranco of those days not so very far past in Oregon when the farmers reckoned the railroads as their dangerous foes. A word of warning to my fellow citi zens: These men have been posting them selves on the present values of Oregon farms and lands. I have known such things happen as that when a prospective buyer from IHInois arrived in Oregon to buy, the owner of the farm to which he was directed took the chance of raising for him by a large per cent the price he asked and had been till that moment ready to accept. Result, direst disgust for the Illinois man, and disappointment for the Oregonian; result indirect, a warning by mail to friends in Illinois to keep away from Oregon. Fortunately the object-lesson of frulC vegetables and grain display finds Its way straight through the eye to the heart. Not only the market value, but the beauty and symmetry of these products appeal' to the trained farmer and fruitralser of these states, and next, fortunately, the supply Is Tvell-wrltten, practical and well-gotten-up and Illustrated pamphlets in this same office goes further and wider and lasts longer than these Rerishable apples. Various counties and districts have done their part well. It is only their due to praise the booklets supplied by Hood River, Josephine County, Salem and Ma rian County, Yamhill, Wasco, Douglas, and honorably to mention Benton and Lincoln. The former of the last two falls between two stools; the book she issued is certainly the most costly, best illus trated and best gotten up of the show, but too costly and elaborate for the wide distribution needed. The little booklet on the other hand, though vell written enough, is too slight and not illustrated I notice that while inquiries are daily in evidence for literature on California and Texas and Washington, yet the piles on the counter do not appreciably dimin ish, but the larger Oregon counter "has to be filled up twice a day. ' Now the objects of this letter are two fold. First, to let the Oregon public into the knowledge of this wide working and admirably managed machine for adding to the people and industries of the state, and second, to Invite the co-operation of districts and counties not yet-represented on this literature counter and In this dis play of products. If they are at a loss how to proceed, let some representative address himself to George M. McKlnney, 23S South Clark street, Chicago, III., and I will undertake to say that he will re ceive, as I did, a cordial, sensible and In structive response to every advance. Let no one who reads this think me too sanguine In my forecast It was a grizzled, conservative Illinois farmer who said to me yesterday: ""Oregon is in the air; there never was such a chance foi Immigration as there Is now." WALLIS NASH. HITS COLLEGE RILES Is the' machinist or carpenter or stone mason anxiously asking as to rates or. BARRING PROFESSIONALISM RELIC OF SNOBBERY. Minnesota Professor Declnrea Pres ent Rules Are Wronc-They Are Opposed to American Idea. DouUhbors Still Gnarded. x WINNIPEG, Manitoba, Nov. 9. The Doukhbors were taken by special train "from Mlnnedosa to Yorkto'n. last night, and were kept In the cars, closely guarded by Northwest Mounted Police. If the nght to move them 100 yards Is any ex ample of what the government has to contend with. It will take a much larger of a new life In Oregon. Here and there-j force to move them the 100 miles to their villages, which are that distance from Yorkton, Professor Conway MacMillan, of the University of Minnesota, a well-known sportsman and an avowed champion of clean sport ad athletics has come out with a vigorous attack on the present college rules barring professionalism. He declares that these rules are the out growth of British snobbery, transplanted in American soil, and that they are en tirely opposed to the American idea. "Not only are the Western- college conference rules governing the amateur standing of college athletics wrong in principle," declared Dr. MacMillan not long ago, "but they absolutely fall of at taining the desired results. Our amateur rules are an outgrowth of "the English custom of barring from amateur sport any man who engages in trade or manual labor. The Englishman makes a feUch of the word gentleman. Part of the code of the British sportsman Is that no man who engages In trade or who has ever done manual labor shall take part in amateur sports. These must be restricted to gentlemen, so at Oxford and Cam bridge the athletes are men who fulfill this Idea of the gentleman. As an Illus tration of the English Idea, no man who has ever worked In a shop or worked on a farm can take part In any of the Hen ley races. Harvard and Yale have truckled to the English Idea, notwith standing It Is so foreign t.o the spirit of our democratic Institutions, and the- West has followed meekly after Harvard and Yale. So there has arisen lnour colleges the theory that It Is a reproach for a man to make money by engaging In athletics. This theory has dictated the rules which govern the amateur stand ing of athletics In the universities of 'the big nine conference. "This -theory, as I have said. Is funda mentally wrong. There Is no logical rea son why a stigma should attach to a man who has used his athletic skill for gain. I quote from the rules of the con ference. There Is no good reason why the admitted professional athlete should not be a member of the college athletic team, provided he is a bona fide student. Suppose a boy can pitch winning base ball. Why should he be barred from col lege athletics because he has chosen to earn a little money by it money which he perhaps used to defray his college ex penses? I do not see why Jeffries, if he entered the University of Minnesota in good faith with the primary idea of se curing an education, should not play on our - football team. I believe that the only stipulation that should be made with regard to members of our athletic teams is that they should be bona fide stu dents. "But not contented with barring the real professional athletes, the Western conference goes further. It bars a man "who. like George Mueller, of Minnesota, participates in a single athletic contest for which a money prize is offered. Under the conference rules, Larsen, half back of the last year's Wisconsin foot ball team, was a professional. He once received a -money prize for winning a bicycle race. The case -was not pushed because the offense was commftted when Larsen was about 14 years of age, and it was considered outlawed; yet technically Larsen was a professional, and had any ofher opponents pushed the matter Wis consin could not with good grace have permitted Larsen to play. "These are some of the things the con ference code does. "Now consider the things It does not do. It does bar the man who has committed one act of so called professionalism who has taken a trivial cash prize for a schoolboy race. who "has violated the letter but not -the spirit of the law but It does not prevent men. from receiving pay for playing foot ball and baseball upon college teams. There is scarcely a Western college which ha6 not now, or has not had with in the last few years, men upon Its ath letic team who were paid for' their serv ices. The athletic associations know noth ing1 of these cases. The associations do not pay football players, but they do re ceive pay from some source, and the condition of this salary is that they play football. "So far as keeping professionalism out of college sports Is concerned, the con ference rules are a howling farce. The code sometimes punishes by .narrlng the offender such petty violations of the let ter pf the law as I have mentioned; it has never been known to detect or pun ish the flagrant violations of both the spirit and the letter which occur every year. "If every college in the country agreed to waive once and for all the question of professionalism In college sport arid to make good standing In classes the only standard of eligibility, I believe every branch of athletics would be kept much cleaner and purer than it Is now. Not only do the present laws not prevent professionalism, but they put a premium upon deception. They promote lying and fraud among all connected with athletics. "Now, suppose every college established a rule that no man should play upon an athletic team unless he were up to the standard in all his studies. That would insure the presence of bona fide students only upon athletic teams. It would keep out the man who enters college for the sole purpose of playing football. A man might be willing to play football for two or three months each Fall for a stated sum,' but few would be willing to do five or six or eight hours' work upon their studies as well, unless tho remuneration was very great." HAN FRANCISCO DOG WON. Got Long? End of Pnrse in Waterloo Cnp Courslnpr. ST. LOUIS, Nov. 9. The results of the finals in the Waterloo cup coursing con test today at Delmar race track resulted in 'a surprise. Roman Athlete, owned by J. H. Rosslter, of San Francisco, got the long end of the purse. Sacramento Boy was picked all along as the winner of the event, but the upset came when the Northern Express puppy, which won the recent futurity at Friend, reb., defeated the California champion In the fourth round of the'stake. Roman Athlete was lucky In his courses, as all were short and the clement of luck played an Im portant feature. Tiburon, who finished second, was also fortunate in this respect. Northern Express and Barefoot Boy, the third and fourth does, ran Into hard 'courses near the close. The winner of the Waterloo purse 'was Lord Butte, owned by L. F. Bartels, of Denver. War burton, a St. Louis hound, was second. The Waterloo plate went to Black Coon, also owned by J. H. Rosslter, King Cash ier being second. The weather was warm and the jacks a good ot Summary: Waterloo cup, third round Tiburon de feated Dom Pedro. S-G, time 0:50; Prairie Bird defeated Patricia, 16-6. time 1:45; Northern Express defeated Cloudburst, 6-3, time 0:25; Sacramento Boy "defeated Slsquoc, 11-6, time 1:00: Barefoot Boy de feated Laughing Water, 4-1, time 0:15; Union Star defeated Llnlethgow Lass, G-i, time 0:12; Grace Greenwood defeated Texas Betty, 10-6, time 0:42; Roman Ath lete defeated Redwood Lad, 8-4, time 0;35. Fourth round Tiburon defeated Prairie Bird, 5-3, time 0:17; Northern Express de feated Sacramento Boy, J.0-8, time 0:5S, Barefoot Boy defeated Union Star, 7-15. time, 2:00; Roman Athlete defeated Grac& Greenwood, 2-0, time 0:10. Semi-final Tiburon defeated Northern Express, 5-3, time 0:18; Roman Athlete dc feajteil Barefoot Boy, 5-1, time 0:20. Finals-Roman Athlete, J. H. Rosslter, San Francisco, defeated Tiburon. Ralph Orthweln, St. Louis, 3-1, time 0:10. Waterloo purse, final Lord Butte, L. F. "Bartels, Denver, defeated Warburton, B. F. Jackson, N. S., St. Louis, 11-6, time 0;56. Waterloo plate, final Black Coon, J. H. Rosslter, San Francisco, defeated Klng Cashler, J.- H. Hosklns, 6-0, time 0:20. The InKlcHlde Handicap. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 9. Weights for the opening handicap which will be run at Ingleslde next Saturday were an nounced today The event, which Is at a mile, will be the feature of the first day's racing of the new California Jockey Club's season. A number of high-class performers are entered. The ellglbles and their Imposts are: , Cameron, Sombrero, Old England, 122; Cunard, 120; Watercure, 116; Homestead, Joe Frey, Autollght, The Fretter, 114; Corrigan. 113; Yellow Tail, 112; Hesper, Flush of Gold, Rlov Shannon, Position, Peaceful. 1?0; Ethylene, 109; Lodestar, Eonlc, Constellator, Hagerdon, Dlvila, 103; Meehanus, Frank" Woods, Narra G., 107; Illowaho, Jim Hale, Verro, Geyser, 106; Byron Rose. Formero, Sister Jeanle, 105; iMagglo Felix, Diderot Vohlcer, 101: Father Wentker, 103; Plan, Rey Dare, Bill Massle, February. Champagne, Imperious, 102; Nugget, 101; Grafter, 100; Candidate, 93; Sailor,' St. Rica, Elfonse, Albert En right, St. Sever, 96; Evea G., 95; Louwel sea, 90. KIiik Will Not Piny Apninnt Yale. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 9. An official statement as to the status of King, the center of the Harvard 'Varsity eleven, will be given by the Harvard crimson tomor row, and it conveys the Information that King will not play against Yale. TRACING ANCESTRY. Marks Thnt Distinguish Possessors of Royal Blood in Korea. Shanghai Times. According to Korean tradition, the marks of royalty are: The possession of 3G teeth, a very prominent nose, promi nent cheek bones, long, narrow eyes, a white complexion, greater length from hip to crown than from Hip to heel, ears so prominent that the man can see them without a looking-glass, a prominent fore head, arms so long that the fingers reach to the knee. It Is probable that this idea comes from the days of Silla, says a Korean .writer, for tradition tells us that when Nam-ha, the second King of Sllla, died, hi3 son Yu-rl insisted that Suk-t'al-ha, the Prime Minister, become Jvlng, but Suk-t'al-ha Insisted that Yu-rl become King. At last they settled the matter by. agreeing that they would hunt up a man who had 36 teeth -and make him King. Having searched a long time in vain, It was at last discovered that Yu-ri himself was the possessor of the extra four teeth, and he could no longer refuse. It is also true that the people of Kyung-sang Province, the site of ancient Sllla, are today gifted with more prominent noses than the average Korean. They are the lineal de scendants or tne sitia people. . Dr. Baelz, of Tokio University, visited Korea some years ago with the special purpose of comparing the Korean -physiognomy with "that of the Japanese, and he expressed the opinion that among the higher classes of Koreans, very many of whom can trace their descent from Sllla times, there are many faces that resemble strikingly the features of the Yamato race lri Japan, which may be called the rep resentatives of an ancient dominant peo ple In those Islands. The question arises. Vrhat connection may there have been between the people" of Sllla and that an cient ruling race In Japan? To Keep Ont Standard Oil. LONDON. N6v. 101 A special dispatch received here from Calcutta says that the Indian government has refused the Stand ard Oil Company permission to prospect In the oil field.! of Burmah. " DILLER WILL CONTESTED ESTATE OF 200,000 IN LITIGATION IN SEATTLE. 8100,000 Loss by Fire. BEAVER FALLS, Pa., Nov. 9. The plant of the Keystone Driller 'Company was destroyed by fire today. Loss, .$100,000. Women, from their sedentary habits, are often subject to headache and constipa tion. These are quickly removed by Car ter's Little Liver P1113. One of the Heirs Making; the Legal Battle Formerly Lived in " Portland. A will contest that Is of interest in Ore gon has been begun In the Superior Court of Seattle. It Involves the estate of the late Leonard Dlller, valued at about $200, 000. Leonard- E. Dlller and Mrs. Daisy Dlller Shlndler are the contestants, both children of the testator by his first wife, who is now the wife of Dr. J. W. Norrls, of Oregon City. Mr. Dlller was a brother of Mrs. Thomas Charman and Mrs. Mary M. Charman, of Oregon City. Mrs. Shlndler Is the wife of D. D. Shlndler. Both are well 'known in Portland, though they now live in California. Winnifred Dlller, executrix; W. G. Potts, executor; Winnifred Dlller, W. G. Potts, Lena Dlller and Earle Diller, who are the principal beneficiaries under tho will, are named as defendants in the con test The will is attacked on the ground that at the time It was executed the tes tator was of weak mind, and therefore did. not have the capacity necessary to decree a prefper distribution of his estate, and on the further ground that he was unduly Influenced by Mrs. Diller and divers other persons to withhold from the son and daughter their rightful share of the estate. The contestants recite that they are children of deceased by his first wife, arid that Winnifred Dlller, widow of the de cedent. Is the stepmother of the petition ers and the mother of Lena and Earlo Diller. Paragraph 6 of the complaint re cites: Your petitioners further respectfully show tfiat for many years prior to the alleged exe cution of the pretended will, decedent was ad dicted to the habitual use of Intoxicants, hav ing consumed from 40 to 60 drinks of alcoholic liquors a day; that such lopg-contlnued habits of Intemperance had undermined his health to such an extent that he was suffcrlnc from a complication of chronic heart, liver and kidney complaints, and his mental faculties had be come impaired so as to dim his perception, confuse his Judgment, paralyze his will and deaden his conscience. That at tho time of the execution of the will, and for a long time prior and subsequent thereto, decedent had suffered, both mentally and physically, the ravages of pain and disease, which Anally cul minated In his death; that at the time 'of the pretended execution of the will, decedent was Buffering from the pains and anguish Incident to death, was not of sound and disposing mind and memory, had not sufficient capacity to make such will, or any will whatsoever, and was not competent to do bo. Paragraph 7 sets forth that the testa mentary dispositions, ot the" will are un natural, unjust and unreasonable, were not understood or comprehended by the decedent, are against equity and good conscience and contrary to the express declarations of deceased made to his many friends, wherein it was stated that "it was his Intent and desire that all his children should participate In hl3 'property at his death equally and In the manner and to the extent provided by law." It Is further set forth that many matters of form and substance, particu larly that provision of the will appointing as executor and executrix two persons so inexperienced and unfitted, and 'that with out bonds, la entirely Inconsistent with decedent's well-known characteristics and business methods. It is alleged that for many years prior to the date of the pretended will there had beenStraintd matrimonial relations existing between Dlller and Winnifred Diller, his wife, decedent having lived sep arate and apart from her, visiting her only at rare Intervals and then solely for the purpose of seeing his children; and that Winnifred Dlller, with Intent wrong fully to appropriate to her own benefit five-sixths of the estate to the exclusion and detriment of .her step-children, con spired with divers other persons, by means of false representations, persuasion and threats, to Induce decedent to sub scribe his name to the will; that In a sim ilar manner deceased was prevailed upon to give his sanction to the organization of a stock company, known as the Hotel Diller, and to transfer, without consid eration, to Winnifred Dlller and "W. G. Potts a large amount of stock whlch-has not been listed by the executors, an which will be lost to the estate unless protected by the timely order of the court Finaliy It Is alleged that the proceeds of the estate are being dissipated and squandered by the executors, who are acting without bonds, and the court is petitioned to suspend or remove them and to substitute' administrators under bonds that its Interests may be protected The petitioners ask for the appointment of a guardian ad litem for Lena and Earle Dlller. minors, and that all' the de fendants be cited to appear and show cause why the pretended will should not bo vacated and annulled. Killed by Demented Fireman. WILKESBARRE, Pa.. Nov. 9. Daniel Norrls. the mine foreman for the Susque hanna Coal Company, who was shot by Patrick Hennessy, a demented, fireman, whom he had discharged, died tonight The action of Hennessy, who Is In jail, in dicates that he is Irresponsible. DAILY METEOROLOGICAL "REPORT PORTLAND, Nov. 0. Maximum tempera ture, 40 deg.; minimum temperature, 40 deg.; river reading, 11 A. M., 5 feet; change In 24 hours, rise O.C foot; total precipitation, 5 P. ir. to 5 P. II.. O.10 inch; total precipitation since September 1, 1002. 8.35 inches; normal precipitation since September 1. 1002, 7.2S inches; excess, 1.07 Inches; no sunshine No vember 8. 1002; possible sunshine, November 8. 1002, 0 hours 48 minutes. PACIFIC COAST "WEATHER. STATIONS. ql Wind. "n .2. a a . 10 c 2 P o o J. s 3 o o . a s 0 3 Astoria Baker City Bismarck Boise Helena Kamloops, B. C North Head .... Pocatello .... Portland Red Bluff Roseburg Sacramento .... Salt Lake City . San Francisco .. Spokane. Seattle "Walla "Wnlla ... I50I0.30I1SIS 02 00110 00 12 00 00 0 24130 00112 1!! 0 68 IB 02 10 12120 00 8 74;i4 0812 20! 04 SE NB SE NE SE SH E SE S SE SE SB E NE "W Cloudy Cloudy Ctoudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy- Cloudy Cloudy Ralnlng Cloudy Raining (Cloudy learning Raining Raining Cloudy Light WEATHER CONDITIONS. Heavy rains have occurred during the last 24 hpvrs In Northern California, and lesser amounts have fallen In the North Paclflo States. Snow Is still falling In Northern Mon tana, but the cold wave In that state'la slow ly moderating. The storm jff the North Pacific Coast con tinues, and high southeast to northeast winds have occurred during the last 24 hours along the "Washington and Oregon coast, and a south east gale Is reported on the North California coast. The wires are down to Cape Flattery. The following maximum wind velocities oc curred during the last 12 hours: North Head, 4S miles, southeast; Sacramento, 40 miles, southeast; San Frcnclsco, 3S miles, southeast, and Red Bluff. 20 miles, southeast. The Indications are for occasional rain In this district Monday, with continued high east erly winds along the coast. The river will rise about three feet higher In consequence of tha recent rains. The stage Sunday was 5 feet "WEATHER FORECASTS. Forecasts made at Portland at 8 P. M. for 25 hours ending midnight November 10: Portland and vicinity Occasional rain. Brisk southeast winds. Oregon. Washing to', and Idaho Occasional rain. South to east winds; high along tha coast. EDWARD" A. BEALS, Forecast Official.