THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 19O0. 13 ealing vesaels killing the female seals while in the water during their annual pilgrimage to and from the south, or in search of fooa. As a rule the female seal when killed Is pregnant, and also has an un weaned pup on land, so that, for each skin taken by pelaslo scaling, a a rule, three lives are destroyed the mother, the unborn offspring, and the nursing: pup, which Is left to starve to death. No damagfl whatever la done to the herd by the carefully regulated killing on land; the custom of pelagic sealing ia solely responsible for all of the oreeent evil, and is alike Inde fensible from the economic standpoint and from the standpoint of humanity. Slaughter of Seal. In 1806 over 16,000 young seals were found dead from starvation on the Frit) I lot Islands. In 1S97 It was estimated that aince pelagic scaling began upward of 400,000 adult female mala had been killed at sea, and over 300,000 ounr seals had died of starvation as 'the result. The revolting barbarity of such a practise, as well m& the wasteful destruction which it involves, needs no demonstration and in Its own condemnation. The Bering Sea Tri bunal, which sat in I'aris in 1803, and which decided against the claims of the United ttatrs to exclusive jurisdiction In the waters ot Bering Sea and to a property right in the fur scald when outside of the three mile limit, determined also upon certain regulations which the Tribunal considered sufficient for the proper protection and. preservation of the fur seal in. or habitually resorting to, the Bering tea. The Tribunal by its regulations estab lished a close season, from the 1st of May to the 31st of July, and excluded all killing in the waters within 60 miles around the Tribilof Islands. They also provided that the regulations which they had determined upon, with a view to the protection t and preservation of the seals, should be submitted every five years to new examination, so as to enable bot h interested Governments to consider whether, in the light of past experience, there . was occasion for any modification thereof. The regulation have proved plainly inad- 0 uate to accomplish the object of protection and preservation of the fur seals, and for a long time this Government has been trying in vain to secure from Great Britain such re vision and modification of the regulations as were contemplated and provided for by the award of the Tribunal of Paris. Raid by Japanese. The process of destruction has been accel erated during recent years by the appearance of a number of Japanese vessels engaged In pelagic sealing. As these vessels have not been bound even by the inadequate limitations prescribed by the Tribunal of Paris, they have paid no attention either to the close season or to the sixty-mile limit Imposed upon the Cana dians, and have prosecuted their work up to the very islands themselves. On July 16 and 17, the crews from (several Japanese vessels made raids upon the island of St. Paul, and before they were beaten off by the very meager and insufficiently armed guard, they succeed ed In killing several hundred seals and carry ing off the skins of most of them. Nearly all the seals killed were females and the work was done with frightful barbarity. Many of the seals appear to have been skinned alive and many were found half skined and stilf alive. The raids were repelled only by the use of firearms, and five of the raiders were H I led, two were wounded, and twelve cap tured. Included the two wounded. Those captured have since been tried and sentenced to imprisonment. An attack of this kind had been wholly unlooked for, but such provision of vessels, arms, and amunitlon will now be made that its repitition will not be found profitable. Suitable representations regarding the inci dent have been made to the Government of Japan, and we are assured that all practica ble measures will be taken by that country to prevent any recurrence of the outrage. On our part, the guard on the island will be increased, and better equipped and organized, and a better revenue-cutter patrol service about the Islands will be established; next st ason a United States war vessel will also be sent there. We have not relaxed our efforts to secure an agreement with Great Britain for adequate protection of the seal herd, and negotiations with Japan for t he same purpose are In progress. Revise Sealing Laws. The laws for the protection of the seals within the jurisdiction of the United States need revision and amendment. Only the islands of St. Paul and St. George are now, in terms, included in the Government res ervation, and the other islands are also to he included. The landing of aliens as well as citizens upon the Islands, without a per mit from the Department of Commerce and 3-nbor, for any purpose except in case of ptreS of weather or for water, should be prohibited under adequate penalties. The approach of vessels for the excepted pur poses should be regulated. The authority of the Government agents on the islands should j be enlarged, and the chief agent should have j the powers of a committing magistrate. The entrance, of a vessel into the territorial wat ers surrounding the islands with intent to take seals should be made a criminal of fense and cause of forfeiture. Authority for seizures in such cases should be given and the presence on any such vessel of seals or sealsklnH, or the paraphernalia for taking them, should be made prima facie evidence ; of such intent. I recommend what legisla tion is needed to accomplish these ends; and 1 commend to your attention the report of Mr. Sims, of the Department of Commerce and Labor, on this subject. In case we are compelled to abandon the hope of making arrangements with other governments to .put an end to the hideous cruelty now incident to pelagic sealing, it will be a question for your serious consid eration how far we should continue to pro tect and maintain the seal herd on land with the result of continuing such a prac tice, and. whether it is not better to end the practice by exterminating the herd our selves in the most humane way possible. Second Hasiie Conference In my lant message I advised you that the Kmperor of Russia had taken the initia tive in bringing about a second peace con ference at The Hague. Under the guidance of Russia the arrangement of the prelim inaries for such a conference has been pro pressing during the past year. Progress has necessarily been slow, owing to the great number of countries to be consulted upon every question that has arisen. It is a matter of satisfaction that all of .the Amer ican republics have now, for the first time, been invited to join in the proposed con ference. The close connection between the sub jects to be taken up by the Red Cross con ference held at Geneva last Summer, - and the subjects which naturally would come before The Hague conference, made it ap parent that It was desirable to have the work of the Red Cross conference com pleted and considered by the different pow ers befora the meeting at The Hague. The Red Cross conference ended its labors on the 6th day of July, and the revised and amend ed convention, which was signed by the American delegates, will be promptly laid before the Senate. By the special and highly appreciated courtesy of the governments of Russia and the Netherlands, a proposal to call The Hague conference together at a time which would conflict with the conference of the American Republics at Rio de Janeiro in August was laid aside. No other date has yet been suggested. A tentative programme for the conference has been proposed by the government of Russia, and the subjects which it enumerates are undergoing careful examination and consideration In prepara tion for the conference. Should Aim at Honorable Peace. It must evr be kept in mind that war is not merely justifiable, but imperative, upon honorable men, upon an honorable na tion, where peace can only be obtained by the sacrifice of conscientious conviction or of national welfare. Peace is normally a great good and normally it coincides with righteousness; but it is righteousness and not peace which should bind the conscience of a nation as it should bind the conscience of an individual; and neither a nation nor an Individual can surrender conscience to another's keeping. Neither can a nation, which is an entity, and which does not die as Individuals die, refrain from taking thought for the Interest of. the generations that are to come, no less than for the In terest of the geneiation of today; and no public men have a right, whether from shortsightedness, from selfish indifference or from sentimentality, to sacrifice national in terests which are vital in character. A Just war is In the Jong run far better for a na tion's soul than the most prosperous peace obtained by acquiescence in wrong or in justice. Moreover, though It Is criminal for a nation not to prepare for war, so that it may escape the dreadful consequences cf betng defeated in war, yet it must al ways be remembered that -even to be de feated In war may be far better than not to have fought at alt. As has been well and finely said, a beaten nation is not necessar ily a disgraced nation; but the nation or man is disgraced if the obligation to defend right is shirked. We should as a nation do everything In our power for the cause of honorable peace. It Is morally as indefensible for a .nation to commit a wrong upon another nation, strong or weak, as for an individual thus to wrong his fcljows. We should do all in our power to hasten the day when there shall be peace among the nations a peace based upon justice and not upon cowardly submission to wrong. We can accomplish a good deal in this direction, but we can nut accomplish everything, and the penalty of attempting to do too much would almost inevitably be to do worse than nothing, for It must be remembered that fantastic extremists are not In reality leaders of the causes which they espouse, but are ordina rily those who do most to hamper the real leaders of the cause and to "damage the cause itself. As vet there Is no likelihood of establishing any kind -of International power, of whatever sort, which can effec tively check wrongdoing, and in these cir cumstances It would be both a foolish and an evil thing for a great and free nation to deprive Itself of the power to protect its own rights and even in exceptional, cases to stand up for the rights of others. Noth ing would more promote iniquity, nothing would further defer the reign upon earth of peace and righteousness, than for the free and enlightened peoples which, though with much stumbling and many shortcom ings, nevertheless strive towara justice, ae liberately to render themselves powerless while leaving every despotism and barbarism armed and able to work their wicked win. The chance for the settlement of disputes peacefully, by arbitration, now depends mainly upon the possession by the nations that mean to do right oi surricieni armeu strength to make their purpose ertecuve. Maintain Strength of Navy. The United States Navy is the surest guarantor of peace which this country pos sesses. It Is earnestly to be wished that we would profit by the teachings of history In this matter. A strong and wise people will study its own failures no less than its triumphs, for there is wisdom to be learned from the study of both, of the mistake as well as of the success. For this purpose nothing could be more Instructive than a rational study of the war of 1812, as It Is told, for instance, by Captain Mahan. xnere was only one way in which that war could have been avoided. If during the precea ing 12 years a navy relatively as strong as that which this country now has had been built up, and an army proviaea rela tively as good as that which the country now has, there never would have been the slightest necessity of fighting the war; and if the necessity had arisen the war would under Buch circumstances have ended wi t ii our speedy and overwhelming triumph. But out people during those 12 years refused to make any preparations whatever, regarding either the Army or the Navy. They saved a million or two of dollars by so doing and in mere money paid a hundredfold for each million they tnus saved during the three years of war which followed a war which brought untold suffering upon our people, which at one time threatened the gravest national disaster, and whlca, in suite of the necessity of waging it, re sulted merely In what was in effect a drawn battle, while the balance of defeat ana tn umph was almost even. I do not ask that we continue to increase our Navy. I ask merely that it bo main tained at Its present strength; and this can be done only if we replace the obsolete and outworn ships by new and good ones, the equals of any afloat In any navy. To stop building ships for one year means that for that year the Navy goes back instead of forward. The old battleship Texas, for instance, would now be of little service In a stand-up fight with a powerful adversary. The old double-turret monitors have- out worn their usefulness, while it was a waste of money to build the modern single-turret monitors. All these ships should be replaced by others; and this can be done by a well settled programme of providing for the building each year of at least one first class battleship equal In size and speed to any that any nation is at the same time building; the armament presumably to con sist of as large a number as possible of very heavy guns of one caliber, together with smaller guns to repel torpedo attack; while there should be heavy armor, turbine engines, and in short, every modern device. Of course, from time to time, cruisers, col liers, torpedo-boat destroyers or torpedo boats, will have to be built also. All this, be it remembered, would not increase our Navy, but would merely keep it at its pres ent strength. Equally, of course, the ships will be absolutely useless if the men aboard them are not so trained that they can get the best possible service out of the formida ble but delicate and complicated mechan isms intrusted to their care. " The marks manship of our men has so improved during the last five years that I deem it wltnin bounds to say that the Navy Is more than twice as efficient, ship for ship, as half a decade ago. The Navy can only attain proper efficiency if enough officers and men are provided, and if tnese officers and men are given the chance (and required to take advantage of it) to stay continually at sea and to exercise the fleets singly and above all in squadron, the exercise to be of every kind and to Include unceasing practice at the guns, conducted under conditions that will test marksmanship In time of war. Keep Vp Standard of Army and Navy. In both the Army and Navy there is ur gent need that -everything possible should be done to maintain the highest standard for the personnel, alike as regards the offi cers and the enlisted men. I do not believe that in any service there is a finer body of enlisted men and of junior officers than we have In both the Army and the Navy, in cluding the marine corps. AH possible en couragement to the enlisted men should be given, in pay and otherwise, and every thing practicable done to render the service attractive to men of the right type. They should be held to the strictest discharge of their duty, and in them a spirit should be encouraged which demands not the mere performance of duty, but the performance of far more than duty, if it conduces to the honor and the Interest of the American Nation; and in return the amplest consider ation should be theirs. West Point and Annapolis already turn out excellent officers. We do not need to have these schools made more scholastic. On the contrary, we should never lose sight of the fact that the aim of each school is to turn out a man who shall be above every thing else a fighting man. In the Army in particular it is not necessary that either the cavalry or infantry officer should have spe cial mathematical, ability. Probably In both schools the best part of the education Is the high standard of character and of profes sional morale which it confers. Promotion by Selection. But in both services there is urgent need for the establishment of a principle of se lection which will eliminate men after a certain age if they cannot be promoted from the subordinate ranks, and which will bring into the higher ranks fewer men. and these at an earlier age. This principle of selec tion will be objected to by good men of mediocre capacity who are fitted to do well while young in the lower positions, but who are not fitted to do well when at an ad vanced age they come into positions of com mand and of great responsibility. BuJ the desire of these men to be promoted to posi tions which they are not competent to fill should not weigh against the interests of the Navy and the country. At present our men, especially in the Navy, are kept far too long in the junior grades, and then, at much too advanced an age, are put quickly through the senior grades, often not at taining to these senior grades until they are too old to be of real use in them; and if they are of real use, being put through them so quickly that little benefit to the Navy comes from their having been In them at all. The Navy has one great advantage over the Army in the fact that the officers of high rank are actually trained in the con tinual performance of their duties; that is, in the management of the battleships and armored cruisers gathered into fleets. This 5 not true of the Army officers, who rarely have corresponding chances to exercise com mand over troops under service conditions. The conduct of the Spanish war showed th lamentable loss of life, the useless extrava gance and the inefficiency certain to result, if during peace the high officials, of the War and Navy Departments are praised and rewarded only if they save money at no mat ter what cost to the efficiency of the serv ice, and if the higher officers are given no chance whatever to exercise and practice command. For years prior to the Spanish war the Secretaries of War were praised chiefly if they practiced economy; which economy, especially in connection with the quartermaster, commissary and medical de partments, was directly responsible for most of the mismanagement that occurred In the war Itself and parenthetically be It ob served that the very people who clamored for the misdirected economy in the first place were foremost to denounce the mis management, loss and suffering which were primarily due to this same misdirected econ omy and to the lack of preparation it in volved. There should soon be an increase in the number of men for our coast defense; these men should be of the right type and properly trained; and there should there fore be an increase of pay for certain skilled grades, especially in the coast artillery. Money should be appropriated to permit troops to be massed in body and exercised In maneuvers, particularly in marching. Such exercise during the Summer Just past has been of incalculable benefit to the Army and should under no circumstances be dis continued. If on these practice marches and in these maneuvers elderly officers prove unable to bear the strain, they should be retired at once, for the fact is conclusive as to their unfitness for war; that Is, for the only purpose because of which they should be allowed to stay in the service. It is a real misfortune to have scores of small company or regimental posts scattered throughout the country; the Army should be gathered in a few brigade or division posts; and the Generals should be practiced in handling the merlin masses. ' Neglect to provide for all of this means to incur the risk of future disaster and disgrace. Efficiency Shown In Cuba. The Teadiness and efficiency of both the Army and Navy in dealing with the recent sudden crisis in Cuba illustrate afresh their value to the Naticn. This readiness and efficiency would have been very much less had it not been for the existence of the Gen eral Staff in the Army and the General i Board In the Navy; both are, essential to the proper development and use of our military forces afloat and ashore. The troops that were sent to Cuba were handled flawlessly. It was the swiftest mobilization and dispatch of troops over sea ever accom plished by our Government. The expedition landed completely equipped and ready for immediate service, several of its organiza tions hardly remaining in Havana over night before splitting up into detachments and going to their several posts. It was a fine demonstration of the value and effi ciency of the General Staff. Similarly, it was owing in large part to the General Board that the Navy was able at the outset to meet the Cuban crisis with such instant efficiency; ship after ship appearing on the shortest notice at any threatened point, while the Marine Corps in particular per formed indispensable service. The Army and Navy War Colleges are of incalculable value to the two services, and they co-operate with constantly increasing efficiency and im nortance. The Congress has most wisely provided for a National board for the promotion of rifle practice. Excellent results have already come from this law, but It does not go far enough. Our regular Army Is so small that In any great war we should have to trust mainly to volunteers; and in such event these volunteers should already know how to shoot; for if a soldier has the fighting edge and ability to take care of himself in the open his efficiency on the line of battle is almost directly proportionate to excel lence in marksmanship. We should estab lish shooting galleries in all the large public and military schools, should maintain Na tional target ranges in different parts of the country and should in every way encour age the formation of rifle clubs throughout all parts of the land. The little Republic of Switzerland offers us an excellent example in all matters connected with building up an efficient citizen soldiery. THEODORE ROOSEVELT. The White House, December 3, 1006. ROOT'S' SPEECH AT CONFERENCE. Declaration of United States' Policy to Other Republics. Mr. President and Gentlemen of the Third Conference of American Republics: I beg you to believe that I highly appre ciate and thank you for the honor you do me. I bring from my country a special greet ing to her elder sisters in the civilization of America. Unlike as we are in many respects, we are alike In this, that we are all engaged under new conditions, and free from the tra ditional forms and limitations of the Old World tn working out the eame problem of popular self-government. It is a difficult and laborious task for eacn of us. Not In one generation nor in one cen tury can the effective control of a superior sovereign, so long deemed necessary to govern ment, be rejected and effective self-control by the governed be perfected in its place. The first fruits of democracy are many of them crude and unlovely ; its mistakes are many. Its partial failures many, its sins not tew. Capacity for self-government does not come to man by nature. It Is an art to be learned, and it Is also an expression of character to be developed among all the thousands of men who exercise popular sovereignty. To reach the goal toward which we are pressing forward, the governing multitude must first acquire knowledge that comes from universal education, wisdom that follows prac tical experience, personal independence and self-respect befitting men who acknowledge no superior, self-control to replace that ex ternal control which a democracy rejects, re spect for law, obedience to the lawful expres sions of the public will, consideration for the opinions and interests -of others equally en titled to a voice in the state, loyalty to tnat abstract conception one's country as inspir ing as that loyalty to personal sovereigns which has so illumined the pa pes of history. subordination of personal interests to the pub lic good, love of justice ana mercy, or iiDeny and order. All these we must seek by slow and patient effort; and of how many short comings in his own land and among his own people each one of us is conscious. People Now Govern World. Tet no student of our times can fail to see that not America alone but the whole civilized world is swinging away from its old governmental moorings and intrusting the fate of its civilization to the capacity of the popular mass to govern. By this pathway mankind is to travel, whithersoever it leads. Upon the success of this our great undertaking the hope of humanity depends. Nor can we fail to eee that the world makes substantial progress towards more perfect pop ular self-government. I believe it to be true that, viewed against the background of conditions a century, a generation, a decade ago, government in my own country has advanced, in the Intelligent participation of the great mass of the people, in the fidelity and honesty with which they are represented, in respect for law, in obedi ence to the dictates of a sound morality, ana in effectiveness and purity of administration. Nowhere in the world has this progress been more marked than in . Latin America. Out of the wrack of Indian fighting and race con flicts and civil wars, strong and stable gov ernments have arisen. Peaceful succession In accord with the people's will has replaced the forcible seizure of power permitted by the people's indifference. Loyalty to country, its peace, its dignity, its honor, has risen above partlzanship for individual leaders. The rule of law supersedes the rule of man. Property is protected and the fruits of enterprise are secure. Individual liberty is respected. Con tinuous public policies are followed: national faith is held sacred. Progress has not been equal everywhere, but there has been progress everywhere.-. The movement In the right direc tion is general. The right tendency is not ex ceptional; it is continental. The present af fords just cause for satisfaction; the future is bright with hope. No Progress In Isolation. It is not by national isolation that these results have been accomplished, or that this progress can be continued. No nation can live unto itself alone and continue to live. Each nation's growth is a part of the development of the race. There may be leaaers ana mere may be laggaras. but no nation can long continue very far in advance of the genecal progress of mankind, and no nation that is not doomed to extinction can remain very far behind. It Is with nations as it is with Individual men ; intercourse, association, correction of egotism by the influence of other's judgment, broadening of views by experience and thought of equals, acceptance of the moral standards of a community the desire for whose good opinion lends a sanction to the rules . of right conduct these are the" conditions' of growth In civilization. A people whose minds are not open to the lessons of the world 6 progress, whose spirits are not stirred by the aspirations and the achieve ments of humanity struggling the world over for liberty and Justice, must be left oenina by civilization In its steady and beneficent advance. To promote this mutual interchange and assistance between the American republics. engagea tn the -same great task, inspired by the same purpose, and nrofessinir the same principles, I understand to be the function of the American Conference now In ses sion. There is not one of all our countries that can not benefit the others; there is not one than can not receive benefit from the others; there is not one that will not gain by the prosperity, the peace, the hap piness of all. According to your programme no great and impressive single thing Is to be done by you; no political questions are to be dis cussed; no controversies are to be settled; no judgment is to be passed upon the con duct of any state; but many subjects are to be considered which afford the possibility of removing barriers to intercourse; of as certaining for the common benefit what ad vances have been made bv each nation In knowledge, in experience, In enterprise. In the solution of difficult questions of gov ernment, and in ethical standards: of per fecting our knowledge of each other; and of doing away with the misconceptions, the misunderstandings, and the resultant preju dices that are such fruitful sources of con troversy. Intercourse Brings Friendship. And there are some subjects in the pro gramme which invite discussion that may lead the American republics towards an agreement upon principles, the general prac tical application or which can, come only in the future through long and patient effort. Some advance at least can be made here towards the complete rule of Justice and peace among nations in lieu of force and war. The association of so many eminent men from all the republics, leaders of opinion in their own homes; the friendships that will arise among you; the habit of temper ate and kindly discussion of TSb-tters of common interest; the ascertainment of com mon sympathies and alms; the dissipation of misunderstandings; the exhibition to all tne American peoples of this peaceful and considerate method of conferring upon in ternational questions this alone, quite Ir respective of the resolutions you may adont and the conventions you may sign, will mark a substantial advance in the direction of international good understanding. These beneficent results the Government and the people of the United States f America greatly desire. We wish for no victories but those or peace: ior no terri tory except our own ; for no sovereignty except the sovereignty over ourselves. We deem the independence and equal rights of the smallest and weakest member of the family of nations is entitled to as much re spect as those of the greatest empire, and we deem the observance of that respect tho chief guaranty of the weak against the op pression of the strong. We neither claim nor desire any rights, or privileges, or pow ers that we do not freely concede to every American republic. We wish to increase our prosperity, to expand our trade, to grow in wealth. In wisdom and in spirit, but our conception of the true way to accomplish this is not to pull down others and profit by their ruin, but to help all friends to a common prosperity . and a common growth, that we may all become greater and strong er together. -'" America at Hague Conference. Within a few months, for, the first time the recognized possessors of every foot of soil upon the American continents can be and I hope will be represented with the ac knowledged rights of equal sovereign states in the great World Congress at The Hague. This will be the world's formal and final acceptance of the declaration that no part of the American continents is to be deemed subject to colonization. Let us pledge our selves to aid each other in the full per formance of the duty to humanity which that accepted declaration Implies; so that In time the weakest and most unfortunate of our republics may come to march with equal step side by side of the stronger and more fortunate. - Let us "help each other to show that for all the races of men the liberty for which wo have fought and la bored in the twin sister of j ustlce and peace. Let us unite in creating and main taming and making effective an all-American public opinion, whose power shall in fluence international conduct and prevent International wrong, and narrow the causes of war, and forever preserve our free lands from the burden of such armaments as are massed behind the frontiers of Europe, and bring us ever nearer to the perfection of ordered liberty. So shall come security and prosperity, production and trade, wealth, learning, the arts, and happiness for us all. Not in a single conference, nor by a single effort, can very much be done. You labor more for the future than for the present, but if the right impulse be given, If the right tendency be established, the work you do here will go on among all the millions of people in the American continents long after your final adjournment, long after your HveSi with incalculable benefit to all our beloved countries, which may it please God to continue free and independent and happy lor ages to come. PASSED UP TO COUNCIL Committee Refuses to Take Action on Saloon Music Ordinance. Shall Portland saloons be allowed to conduct concert balls and vaudeville per formances? This was the question that occupied the attention of the liquor license committee of the City Council at a meeting held yesterday afternoon. A draft of the proposed ordinance grant ing saloons such privileges was submitted to the committee yesterday. The Portland Musicians' Union is with the saloon men In the fight for the ordinance. While most of the members were In favor of granting the saloons the privi lege of having music, the proposition to permit concerts and vaudeville perform ances did not meet with approval. After lengthy discussion and careful consid eration it was decided to submit the or dinance to the Council without comment or amendment. Mrs. Millie R. Trumball, on behalf of the Associated Charities, appealed to the Council to prohibit music in all saloons and cafes. Mrs. Lola Baldwin. Superin tendent of the Travelers' Aid Society, and Mrs. Ada Unruh, representing the Wo man'! Municipal Association, also ad dressed the committee, requesting that music of all kinds be kept out of saloons. Will Hold Annual Election. Pomona Grange, Patrons of Husbandry, will hold its quarterly meeting and elec tion of officers today at Gresham. It con venes in the Gresham Grange hall today at 10 o'clock. Besides the election of of ficers for the ensuing two years, the proposition to establish a jute mill at the Salem penitentiary for the making of grain sacks will be considered, and a resolution of some sort will be passed. t i. mtari that there will be a large attendance of members. Gresham Grange will entertain the memoera. DAILY METEOROLOGICAL 'REPORT. PORTLAND, Dec. 4. Maximum tempera- An Ht. minimum. 29. River reading at 8 A M., 3.8 feet; change in last 24 hours. fall 0.2-foot. Total precipitation, o f. ai to 5 P. M-, trace; total since September 1, 1906, 13.92 Inches; normal, 12.51 Inches; ei i a.1 inch Total sunshine. December 3, 1900, 7 hours and 11 minutes; possible. 8 hours and 62 minutes. Barometer re duced to sea-level) at 5 P. M., 30.10 Inches. PACIFIC COAST WEATHER. WIND. b 2. n O (9 o o f f 2 STATIONS. Baker City 4410.00! 4IS Cloudy Cloudy - Cloudy Pt. Cldy. Pt. Cldy. Clear Rain Cloudy Rain Cloudy Cloudy Clear Rain Clear Cloudy Rain Rain Cloudy Bismarck ....... Boise.' ....... 24 T. 12E 3S0.00 4NW Eureka Helena Kamloops, B. C North Head.... Pocatello Portland Red Bluff Roseburg Sacramento Salt Lake City.. San Francisco. . Spokane Seattle 0.00 0.00 SW NW E SB V E W s "N NW NW SW 40 0.00 0.18 0.401 T. io.oo 10.00 lO.OOl 4210.01 6210.00 28 4fi0.01 4810.14 2S0.00 SE Tatoosh Island. Walla Walla K8IS 4jN T. Trace. WEATHER CONDITIONS. During the last 12 hours a storm of de- The Perfect Food Beverage ill oSi I The kind of Cocoa Beans that we use contain six times as much food value as beef. We buy only the highest-priced. Our Cocoa is nothing but Cocoa and that is why it is the most delicious of Cocoas. The WALTER M. LOWNEY CO., Boston, Mass. J.G.MACK&CO. 'A good Rug makes a fine gift. Have you thought of that? A Rug is always useful; if good, it is most durable; if well chosen from a good stock, it is beautiful. A good Rug will not go the way of other Christmas presents, but will re main for years, a thing of beauty and service and a constant reminder of. the giver. Our stock is large, complete and low priced. You will take pleasure in see ing our Rugs, as we shall in showing them. Exclusive Carpet House 86-88 THIRD STREET HOL METSCBAX. President and Mm. Seventh and Washington European Plan elded character has made Its appearance over British Columbia and southwest storm warnings were ordered displayed at 5:40 P. M. at all stations in Washington, and also at the mouth of the Columbia River, for increasing southerly winds becoming? high and later shifting: to southwest. Light rain has fallen in Western Washington and ex treme Northwest Oregon,' and rain or snow, depending: upon elevation, has fallen gener ally in Southeastern Idaho, Utah and Ne vada. The changes in temperatures since yesterday have been small and generally in the nature of a slight rise. The indications are for rain or snow in this district Wednesday. WEATHER FORECASTS. Forecasts made at Portland for the 28 hours ending: midnight, November 5: Portland and vicinity Rain, possibly part snow; southerly winds. Western Oregon Rain, possibly part Lowney'a Chocolate Bonbon and Chocolate product. . P Quaker Maid Rye Awarded Three. Gold Medals m 'ds "The Whiskey 2k JMWU with a Reputation" WS. PWyV j : i- "I ii jjW 1 K -rI-1 dob, and drug storM. jj SjgfgjA h f t ' i v RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARD AT II " fii)tyiS ) yOV " Jr St. Louis World's Fair, M; Paris Pure Food and tif.lt KrJiU-, l&jH" Industrial Exhibition. 1905; Lewis and Clark u . i mjM' Exposition, Portland, Oregon, 1906 n 5 S.HIRSCH&CO. Kansas City, Mo. frgS; Streets. ptitUnd, Oreron. $1.00, $1.60, $2.00 per Day. snow; increasing southerly winds, becoming nigh along the north coast. Western Washington Rain: Increasing southerly winds, becoming high and later shifting to southwest. eastern Oregon and Southern Idaho Rain or snow. Eastern Washington and Northern Idaho Rain or snow and warmer. EDWARD A. REALS, District Forecaster. AUCTION 8AI.ES TODAY. Auction sale, by J. T. Wilson, at salesroom, 203 1st et., at 10 A. M. J. T. WILSON, Auctioneer. At 329 Montgomery St., furniture of resi dence. Sale at 10 o'clock. Baker & Son, auctioneers. MEETING NOTICES. WASHINGTON LODGE, NO. 46 A. F. & A. M. Stated communica tion this (Wednesday) evening at 8 o"clock, Burkhard building. Work M. M. degree. Visiting brethren welcome. By order W. M. J. H. RICHMOND, Secretary. SAMARITAN LODGE, NO. 2, I. O. O. F. Regular meeting this (Wednesday) evening at 8 o'clock. Initiation. Visitors welcome. M. OSVOLD, Secretary. PORTLAND CHAPTER, NO. 3, R. A. M. Special convocation this ( Wednesday evening. December 5, at Masonic Temple, 7:30 o'clock. Past Master and M. ts. M. degrees, vis itors welcome. A. M. KNAPP, Sec. TOUNG r-December 4, to the wife of A. W. Young, a daughter. DIED. CLEMENT At the residence at Lents, Or., December 4, 1906, Jennie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Clement, aged 11 years, 8 montlu and 6 days. Notice of funeral will be given later. COLBURN At Good Samaritan Hospital. Tuesday, December 4, Oscar Colburn, aged i;t years, 4 months and 11 days. Remains will be shipped to La Center, Wash., by Ericson Undertaking Co. for interment at 3 P. M. today (Wednesday). FUNERAL NOTICES. HUNT Friends and acquaintances are re spectfully invited to attend the funeral services of the late Leon D. Hunt, which will be held at the Portland Crematorium today (Wednesday) at 10 A. M. PAWLING At Goldendale, Wash., Decem ber 2, 1906, Nettie J. Pawling, aged 42 years, 8 months and 117 days. Friends and acquaintances are respectfully Invited to attend the funeral services, which will be held at the Central Baptist Church, corner 20th and E. Ankeny sts., at 2 P. M. Thursday, December 6. Interment Green wood cemetery. DUNNING, M'ENTEE ft C.I LB A UGH Suc cessors to Dunninr A Campion, undertaker and erabalmera ; modern in every detail; 1th and ine. rnone Main 4u. taay assistant. ERICSON UNDERTAKING CO., 409 Alder st. Lady asttlatant. Phone Main 6123. EDWARD HOLM AN CO.. Funeral Direct or 220 3d st. Lady assistant. Phone ML 607. ZELLER-BYRNES CO., tJnaertakers, Em. batmen, 273 Russell. East 1088. Lady asst. J. P. 'ITNXEY SON. Fnneral Director. No. 261 Sd St., cor. Madison. Phone Main S. F. 8. DCNNTNO, Undertaker, 414 East Alder. Lady assistant. Phone East 52. A AMUSEMENTS. T 8:15 - HEILIB THEATER Gabrilowitsch Prices: Lower floor. $2.00, $1.50: baleonv, $1.60, $1.00; (rallery. $1.00: .grallery admis sion, 75c. Doors open 7:30 P. M. SEATS NOW SELLING. SShKSe HEILIG THEATER Fri., Sat. Nights. Dec. 7-8. Special Mat. Sat. MAX1NE ELLIOTT In Clyde Fitch's Comedy. "HER GREAT MATCH." Evening Prices Lower Floor, except last 3 rows. $2: last 8 rows. $1.50. Balcony, flrst 4 rows. $1.50; next 5 rows. $1: last 5 rows, 75c. Entire Gallery, 50c; Boxes, $10. Special Matinee Prices 50c to $2. Seats Now Selling at Theater. BSKBr Tll63tCr Orego'n"'.., u iiiuuiui G, u Bsker. Mrr. Home of the Baker Theater Stock Com pa nr. Tonight. All Matinee Saturday. The Beautiful Society Play. "A SOCIAL HIGHWAYMAN." Evening prices 25c, 33c, 50c; matinee 15c. 23c. Next week "The Merchant of Venice." EMPIRE THEATER Main 117. Milton W. Seaman, Manager. One Entire Week Matinee TODAT 2:15 and Saturday; Every Evening 8:15. The Great New England Rural Play, "Quincy Adams Sawyer" Strong Cast. Regular Empire Prices. Next Week The Two Johns." The Grand Week of Dec. 3. DICK and ALICE McAVOY. "De Pride of Newspaper Row." Delevin and Elwood. Morris and Kramer. Gaflaney "Brown. The La Renos. Master Harold Hoi, Grandiscope. THE STAR "Week of Dec. 3. Phone Main 5496. THE ALLEN STOCK COMPANY Presents "THE SLAVE GIRL," Matinets Tuesdays. Thursdays. Saturdays and Sundays at J::i0 P. M., prices 10 and 2rt cents; every evening at 8:15 o'clock, prices 10, 20 and 30 cnts. PANTAGES THEATER Fourth and Stark. O'Dell and Hart. Blair and O'Neill. Thatcher. Prof. Andre. The Ulcjtraph. Leo White. European Animal Cirrus A feature Attraction. Performances daily at 2:30, 7:30 and P. M. Admission lo and 20 cents. Take any seat at weekday matinees for TEN cents. LYRIC THEATER WEEK BEGINNING DECEMBER 3. Frank Harvey's Sensational Melodrama In Four Acts. "Wages of Sin" Bor office open from 10 A. M. to 10 p. M. Seats can be reserved by phone; Main 4685. YOU CAN MAKE $200 PER WEEK By giving performances in theaters, churches, schoolhouses, societies, etc., with a Motion Picture outfit. For par ticulars, call at NEWMAN'S MOTrON PICTURE MACHINE CO., 145V4 Sixth. CLASSIFIED AD. RATES "Booms." "Rooms and Board," "House keeping; Rooms," "Situations Wanted," 18 words or less, 15 cents; 16 to SO words, 20 cents; 21 to 25 wordsv 25 cents, etc No dis count for additional Insertions. UNDER ALL OTHER HEADS, except "New Today," 30 cents for IB words or lew; 16 to 20 words, 40 cents: 21 to 25 words. SO cents, etc. ant Insertion. Each additional Insertion, one-half; no further discount un der one month. "NEW TODAT" tenure measure agate). 15 cents per line, flrst insertion; 10 cents per line for each additional Insertion. ANSWERS TO ADVERTISEMENTS, ad dressed care The Oregonian. and left at this office, should always be inclosed In sealed envelopes. No stamp la required on such letters. The Oregonfan will not be responsible for errors In advertisements taken through the telephone. NEW TODAY. UNCLE MYERS' LOAN OFFICE. 143 3D St., near Alder, established 1870; old and reliable; any amount loaned on watched, diamonds. Jewelry and sealskins. ALEX. C. RAE. PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT, 407 McKay Building, Phone Main 6401. FOR RENT DESIRABLE FRONT ROOM, Sixth and Washington sts., suitable for office or ll(tht manufacturing. Inquire 31 34 Washington Building. ORIENTAL CARVED IVORY, US 6 Til st. ..Mexican Drawnwork Co. PORTLAND la attracting more attention than any city on the Pacific Coast and Is undergoing a MIGHTY TRANSFORMATION and in tha next ten years will likely make more PROGRESS than It has in its entire past. The EAST SIDE has the most HOMES, has the GREATEST population. Is growing the most RAPIDLY, and the GREATER PORTLAND MUST and WILL be there. Holladay 's Addition Is the geographical center of the city, and la the most DESIRABLE) residence district, and much of thle will become BUSINESS property. Do not overlook these FACTS when making Investments, and call and la epect the property, for see Ins; la believing;. The Oregon Real Estate Company S8 Third St.. Room ,4. Portland. Oregon. "BUY BUSINESS PROPERTY" $32,000 50x50. with 3 story uildinpr. on Yamhill St. Income $175 per month. Will sell on easy terms. Call and we will show you the property. Reed, Fields 6 Tynan Company 102 Second street. Phone Main 7004. Park Street $32,500 pe"rns income S Vanduyn & Walton 303 Chamber Commerce CANTON BA7AAR Chlnpsft and .Taiwanese, curlo and art (rood. carved furniture, royal Satsuma. clo!ssonn. brasses, carved Ivory; fine. Canton linen em broidery, silk and satin dresHinur (towns; large stock holiday poods; direct Imported. 90 Sixth ftt., between Stark and Oak. JAPAN BAZAAR $5000 stock of Japanese fancy goods. Must be sold regard less of cost. 66 SIXTH ST.. BET. OAK AND PINE. -