" 8 frllE 3IORXIXG OREGOXIAy. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1909. PORTLAND, OREGON. ' Entered at Portland. Orefon. Postofflce , Sacond-Class Matter. ' aabacriptlon Bate Invariably In Advance. . By Mall.) Dallj. Sunday laeludrd. one year $S .00 'Dally. Sunday Included, six months.... 4 Ially. Sunday lncluaea. tnrea mnmm. . ' . rally. Sunday Included, one, monin ai:v. vlthout Sunday, one year... 75 8.00 3 25 Dally, without Eunday. six months Dally! without Sunday.' three month... XT 'Daily, without tunday. one mania.. '"Weekly, one year 'Sunday, one year 'Sunday and weekly, one year .0 1.50 2 .V) a. so . Dally. Sunday Included, one year 9.0O 'Daily. Sundav Included, one month "5 How Remit bend poatofnee money order, expresa order or personal check on your local bank. Stamp, coin or currency are at the sender's risk. Give postolflce ad dre's In full. Including county and ,a,e-,. Foe tare Rate 10 to 14 paaea. I cent: IB .to 28 paces. 2 cents; SO to 40 panes. 3 cents; ,40 to 60 pages. 4 cents. Foreign postage double rate. . na Tk. e C nrk avaaieTii rumi-wi win. -t. , , , - . - . . , . . Vn.!. mnms 48 ;jo Trlhune building. Chicago, rooms 510-513 Tribune Duiiatng. .'PORTLAND. SATTRDAV. N"OV. 10.109. ' A NAVAX BASE IX THE PACIFIC. It is fortunate for the United States .that we have in the Hawaiian Islands ;n advantageous position for a naval outpost In the Pacific' Are we to re gain the Philippines? We may not 'retain them permanently; yet if we are !to retain them, the Hawaiian Islands 'will afford always an intermediate sta- tion. If we shall, sometime, (when !we can) quit the Philippines, still the 'Hawaiian naval station will De aavan- -rareous. for supervision and protee 1'lon of our Pacific Ocean and Oriental ;ommerce. The position oi tor use as a naval and commercial out- ?ost in the great Pacific Ocean, is ! anique; for all our Pacific commerce ; nay be sheltered by It. Not only so. ku. what is still more important, irum ! ur Hawaiian naval station any enemy ; jiay.be intercepted in an attack di- rected against the r-acinc i-oasi oi mo ' : fTnited States. President Taft. it is reported. Is of .'.he opinion that Pearl Harbor snouia J it Improved, enlarged, deepened and fortified, and made our great naval Ibase In the Pacific. "vVord comes from .'Washington that he will recommend It to Congress, and urge prosecution of I the plan, under the direction of naval nd military engineers. Pearl Har : bor Is better situated, and affords bet fter facilities, for a naval station than any other place In the Hawaiian Is- lands. It is near Honolulu; it can be li.iproved and defended more easily "than any other port-.. Already a dry idock is now under construction there by the United States. Enlargement !and fortification of the port will make it a most suitable station .(aptlssima inavibus); at once a naval base, a place 'of refuge and defense; a place of sup ply; a place for sally, in emergency of .war. almost in the heart of the Pacific ! Ocean; from which, as a point of sur vey and operation, our country may , be In position to protect the Panama 'Canal, the Philippine Islands, our Pa cific Coast States of America, and our .general Interests in the commerce of the Pacific. t With creation of the naval station at Pearl Harbor", prudence will require -gradual increase of our naval force in the Pacific. Danger of war to the United States will not appear hence forth on the Atlantic, but on .the Pa cific. Nations that border on the At lantic have been sated with war; new vistas open-to those which border' on the Pacific. There is new stir among all the Oriental races, with whom we can have no assurance of permanent peace. Within the last forty years science naval, military, electric has put into the hands of the races once supposed inferior, weapons that have equalized former unequal conditions as the invention and use of gunpowder Mopped all the Front de Boeufs and Brian Bois Gilberts, in their coats of nail, on horseback. As the most powerful soldier in the ranks of the British Guards at Waterloo was slain by a French drummer boy, so now. In greater degree, later science has put Into the hands of races, once scouted as inferior, means and instru ments of war that equalize weaker men with stronger, on a great scale; and 'on the side where fatalism is the inspiration of valor and numbers may overpower, victory not unlikely will prevail or defense may be dearly purchased. Defense at sea against such dangers Is and always will be the main defense. ; Hence, the United States needs this naval outpost, in the Pacific. It is In- dispensable as Gibraltar is to the British Empire. Dependence on human kindness and the brotherhood of man I sever yet protected a nation, nor ever 'will unless, indeed, it is a small" na- tion protected by " the '- rivalry "of .' greater, yet likely to be overrun, by oi.e and another, as Holland, Belgium and Italy heretofore have been. Our Pacific States should stand as a Unit, ; not only- for fortification of their own recasts and ports, but for establishment land maintenance of a great naval ; base in' the Hawaiian Islands. Namby- paniby philosophy or philanthropy "never yet was good for defense unless backed and supported' by something an enemy could not laugh at. HARD TIMES AND TEMPERANCE. Cause and effect become somewhat Jindetermlnate when one makes a close study of the liquor problem- We find, for example, that liquor-drinking to excess causes poverty, and on the other hand, poverty seems to promote the cause of temperance. This latter is not an Idle statement or a theory.. It is the natural deduction from official figures on the whisky consumption of this country. The fiscal year ending June SO, 1908.' was a hard one on all classes of people. There was but lit tle employment for labor, and capital had not emerged from, the .hiding places Into which it had been fright ened by the panic of 1907. There were four "fat" months In the fiscal year before the panic broke, in October, 1907. but the eight lean ones which followed curtailed the expenditure for whisky to such an extent that but 119,703.594 gallons ' were withdrawn from bond during the entire twelve months. . ." The cause" 'of - temperance, as re flected in new laws, elimination of sa loons and great Increase in the "dry" territory', enjoyed a veritable boom in the past year; but strange as It may teem this boom In the temperance movement was accompanied by a heavy increase in the amount of whisky .consumed, the withdrawals of 134.901.40S gallons for the fiscal year ending June 30. 1909, being the largest on record. The average for the ten years preceding was 112,332,110. This would seem to indicate beyond ques- tion that the consumption of liquor decreased when times were bad and there was no money with which to in dulge In the liquor habit, and increased again as soorl as the financial situa tion Improved. The liquor business may not cause so much trouble In "dry" districts as It does where the laws are less strin gent, but the consumption is probably greater. The man who is obliged to buy it by the gallon undoubtedly con sumes more than he would hf he bought,. It by the drink at .the corner grocery or saloon. That the economic, more than the moral point involved, i. runrnihla for decreasing con sumption of liquor, finds further cor roboration In the situation In Great Britain where there has been a de crease of BO per cent in the amount nt iinnor consumed as compared witn that consumed prior to the hard times and the increased tax on beverages. Mr. Lloyd-George offered as an excuse for the loss of revenues through the decreased consumption the suggestion that the increased tax had prom6ted the cause of temperance. As the con sumers who drink most or the liquor that Is sold in Great Britain have suf fered more bv hard times than tne poorer class of liquor drinkers in this country, the cause Is undoubtedly tne same there as here simply lacK o money with which to satisfy thei cravings for liquor. ' MADAMS STEIXKEHS TOUR. It will be entertaining and possibly Instructive to hear Madame Steinhell lecture on the French courts, if she decides to visit these shores for that purpose. She will speak as one who knows, as one who non ignara mall can tell all about It to others. If she cherishes some spite against the tri bunal which tried her and the Judge who questioned her, it Is no wonder, for the ordeal she went through was, a hard one, but she ought not to forget after all that she was acquitted. though appearances were against her. She cannot deny that the French courts, with all their severity, protect the innocent fully as well as ours whle they punish the guilty with a great deal more certainty. One Infers that Madame Steinheil's missionary purpose Is twofold. On the one hand, she will seek to make us better satisfied than we are with our criminal courts. On the other, by a tour in France, she' will undertake to stimulate discontent with the French system. Both objects are regrettable. Americans already admire their crim inal courts quite as much as circum stances warsant, and France has noth ing to gain by Initiating our slip-shod hysterical -and ineffectual methods of dealing with crime. If Madame Stein hell would consent to visit us purely as a curiosity, she would be more wel come than she will be as a mission ary. Most Americans will gladly be stow of their substance to help re plete her " purse In return for the sight of her piquant face, but not nearly so many will care for her ex hortations. If she must talk, why doe she not prepare a lecture on the North Pole or some other subject of practical interest? Our foreign visi tors are prone to forget that we are above all things a practical people. GRACE AND CANNON. The international importance of the reported execution of the adventurers Grace and Cannon by Zelaya in Nic aragua depends entirely on the way our Government decides to look at it. President Taft seems disposed tq hold that the, insurrectionists are waging lawful war upon the tyrant who poses as president of the Bepubllc. In that case Zelaya acted rather rashly when he caused the two Americans to be shot. They appear to have been reg ularly enrolled in the insurgent army and were entitled to the rights of pris oners of war. But if the NIcaraguan rebels cannot be regarded as belliger ents, very likely the two men had no rights -which Zelaya was bound to re spect. They took their lives in their hands when they Joined the rebels and the fate' which, befell them was a con tingency which . they ought to have counted upon. Governments do not usually exert themselves very actively to protect subjects who choose to risk their lives as Grace and Cannon did. Still, It sometimes happens that the execution of an adventurer Is used as a pretext for intervention -when a pre text Is desired. In this instance it rather looks as If a pretext were desired by our Gov ernment. Mr. Taft may possibly strain a point and make an ostensible zeal for protecting American citizens cover a real desire to put an end to the In terminable discords which . distract Nicaragua. The little Republic hard ly knows what peace means, and its Internal troubles have always attracted bold spirits from the United States to stake their lives on one side or the other in" Its clvU wars in the hope of winning power and fortune. . 'Probably William Walker was the most picturesque of . these adventur ers. .-His brilliant success, - though It was only -transitory, has been- an" un failing allurement to others to imitate him. Walker began his military ex peditions southward In 1853, when he was 29 .years old, by: an 'attack on Mexiop. That" Republic had not felt the Ircm heel of Diaz in those'days and was as turbulent and impotent as Nic aragua Is now. Walker landed his force at La Paz In liower California. Fortune favored him for a little while. He captured some villages, proclaimed himself President of Mexico, quite in the orthodox Latin-American style, and set out Inland In what he thought would be a triumphal progress. Per haps It would have been If his ammu nition and provisions had lasted, but they gave out and he had "to flee to the United -States. He was tried at San Francisco for breach of the neu trality laws, but, in the face of all the evidence, was acquitted. ' The neutral ity laws were as -hard to violate: In 1853, apparently, as the bribery laws are now. -Free from 'the not very dangerous tolls of California Justice, Walker made a fresh start in 1855. This time he chose Nicaragua for the field of his adventures and his brief career there', reads like a tale from the Ara bian Nights. Curral, the President, was distinguished more for discretion than .valor. Walker frightened him out of -his senses by .capturing the town of Granada and was forthwith made commander-in-chief of the Republic by the trembling chief magistrate. Then in true buccaneer style Walker arrested his benefactor and shot him.' Soon after he elected himself President of the country. His administration lasted somewhat longer than Nicaraguan fashion permits.- He retained power for some eighteen months, but the in evitable revolution finally occurred and he was driven out. When Walker reached the United States' he was ar rested again, but the authorities did not take his misdeeds seriously. He was soon at liberty once more and lived not only to invade Nicaragua a second time, but also to make, two e.-peditlons against; Honduras, but For tune never renewed her smiles. All his undertakings failed, and the gov ernment of Honduras at last court martialed him and ended his career with a bullet. Probably our Government had as much sound reason for taking Hon duras to task In Walker's case as it has for resenting the execution of Grace and Cannon by Zelaya, but cir cumstances make a great difference In such affairs. The time has been when the authorities at Washington have seen a whole shipload of filibus ters executed without losing their t i. -.11 ns P.ntMl equanimity. ua a wc v--America' was very attractive to these srentrv between 1850 and 1860. The rjom nf the Antilles was then carry Ing on one of Its many revolts from cinnln anA a rl vent nrous voune Ameri cans flocked thither for excitement and fortune. The Spaniards shot them down ruthlessly, but Washington made no protest. Indeed, there was none to make under International law. The filibusters broke our own law as well as Spain's. Aaron Burr narrowly es caped conviction for violating the neu trality laws in plotting against Mexico thoiirfi he was also accused of treason which is a more serious crime. His great scheme Included the conquest f XTexim. but he vlanned also to sever the Mississippi country, from the Union and erect a huge Empire. He might have succeeded if his followers had been faithful. All that saved him from conviction of treason was John Mar shall's deadly enmity to Jefferson. Jef farann eno-erlv desired to hansr Burr andthat was a sufficient reaspn why Marshall, wno presiaea at. tne trim in Richmond, looked to it that ne was ac quitted. OUR PRESTIGE A3 A PORT. Nearly one-fourth of all the wheat exported from the United States dur ing October, 1909, was shipped from Portland. The shipments for the mnnih m-era more than 800.000 bushels In excess of those of any other port except New York, which was in nrsr. place with 2,938.984 bushels, compared with 2,115.439 bushels from Pqrtland. The prestige of this city as one of the great wheat ports of the world Is further hbwn in the Government figures for the ten months ending with October, which give this city sec .ond place. New York being first. Phila delphia third, Duluth fourth, Chicago fifth and Puget Sound sixth. These are figures compiled by the various customs districts, and are ac cordingly official. They find readers thrniie-hout the entire civilized world wherever commerce is handled, and are most effective advertising, which has been' largely made possible by tne ex cellent work of the Port of Portland in nrovidinsr shiDDlng with a safe ecnomlcal port -of entry and discharge. LATEST 'ATTACK ON BALL1XOER. In the quiet repose of their literary dens in New York, Washington and other Eastern cities, the "yellow fel- .lers" .who grind out copy for the muck-raking magazines and weekly capers are developing great solicitude for the natural resources of the Far West. Not wishing to be handicapped in - their flights of fancy, but scant consideration is given the facts bear ing on. -conservation. Secretary Bal linger as the head of the land department-seems to be the target at which most of these attacks are aimed. Ad vance notices state that he is to -suf fer a typical assault In the December Issue of Hampton's Magazine. The object of this particular attack is the permission granted the Hill and Har riman roads to build Into Central Ore gon on a. water-level grade through the Deschutes canyon. This Hampton's Magazine muck- raker makes the unqualified state ment that Secretary Garfield refused to grant the right-of-way through the canyon until the surveys were maae placing, the tracks above the level of necessary dams and reservoirs. As a matter of fact, it was Secretary Gar field who approved the railroad, survey through 74 miles of the canyon nearly two years before Secretary Balllnger took the office. This glaring misstatement is not the worst feature of the article. The point on which OregOD is placed at a dis advantage here, as well, as In nearly all of these attacks. Is in the assump tion that our people are not familiar with what is needed in our own coun try. The Deschutes railroad is tne onlv. means by which any develop ment would be possible in Central Oregon. Without a railroad, the wa ter power would be useless to any one and Its conservation would be of no advantage. This is a situation so well under stood throughout Oregon that there is not the slightest objection to giv ing the railroads right-of-way through the Deschutes, canyon without forcing them to build their lines high up along the sides of the canyon, where -con struction and operation would alike be unnnecessarily costly. Admitting, how ever, that the granting of permission for the railroads to follow the water- level grade through the canyon would be detrimental to development of , the power sites, tne provisions unaer which the surveys were approved were such ' that whenever it becomes nec essary to improve the power sites the railroads will be obliged to change their grades to permit the power site improvements. This latest attack on Secretary Ballinger is so full of in accuracies and misstatements that it will hardly fall to have a boomerang effect wherever the actual facts are known. According to the old story, when Satan and Mephlstopheles had that lit tle controversy over who should be first on the Job, Satan gave his chief mate a hunk, .of brimstone and told him to go away and start a little hell of his own. Now that there does not seem to be any room In the Christian Science Church for Mrs. Stetson, It would seem that Mother Bddy had kindly but firmly told her to go away and start a little church of her own. One head to the church, like one cap tain on a ship, seems to be about 'all that can. be used to advantage. Mrs. Stetson still announces that she is a firm believer in the teachings of Chris tian Science, but it will require a strong faith- to, enable her to believe that she has not been "fired" irom the church. Let us hope that the army of bunco steerers and miscellaneous criminals who fled In terror when Police Judge Bennett made his celebrated speech, will not, on' their -return- to the city, make a demand for railroad fare and other expenses Incurred In the hasty get away. These men, of course, had no means of knowing that Judge Ben nett could not prove what he thought he knew to be facts, and their hurried flight from the city was all due tq a mistake. The -incident should serve as a warning against "hollering" be fore being hurt. At the same rime, these criminals who have found Port land such good working ground, should keep in mind that old saying about the pitcher which makes too many trips to the welt A monument is to bevPlaced at the spot where Washington, crossed the Delaware, when he moved to the at tack on Trenton. It's "well enough; hut lust time a certain friend of ours crossed the Delaware, as he says only a few months ago, he saw the print of the hoofs of Washington s horse he rallnDed ut "the eastern bank. tm mra.ln.st the Hessians. Now The Oregonlan is riot vouching for thiB story. It merely gives the story as it o-nt it. But those hoof prints cer tainly are more Interesting than any monument. Nor is the , story about them more wonderful than that about the origin of that black streak down i p, 29 6s lnches, w1th a Cor the slope of Mount Hood, seen every, n-,,,,!,,,, reading at all stations in the Summer from Portland. " In the first party that ascended Mount Hood was a pioneer American, trapper, or mis cinnnrv fwe don't remember which. and It doesn't matter), who had nine pounds of bacon among the provisions he was -carrying in his coat-tan pocnei. vis reet llrl' frnm under him. and down he went, .Pom the top to the bottom of the mountain, leaving that hia-lc xtreAk behind him: and th story S true, because the streak can still be seen any fine clear day, iro Portland. . '" "We have made- some progress since riifrerenreit nf oniniori on religious mat ters were settled by burning at the stake and similar methods, but that old ureument started by Martin Luther still appeals wth great force to some of our religious enthusiasts, vie lis ten, of Astoria, came on earth a few rentnries too late to be burned at the stake fof his religious views, but the courage of his convictions regardin the sincerity of Martin Luther lande him in St. Vincent's Hospital with three broken ribs, a broken jaw, a pro ken knuckle, a bruised head, two black even and sundrv bruises elsewhere on his body. Half a dozen Irish sailors are held responsible for handling thi nec-RtivA end of the argument so ef fectlvely, and, while one can hardly fail to admire Ole's cluck as a modern martyr, his judgment regarding odds iinn tint seem to be much better than that of some of his predecessors many generations ago. Sneaklntr for Senator Chamberlain Chairman Seek and the whole body of Democratic bosses and partisans their . Portland orsran.- declares . the primary, with statement one, highly satisfactory: and it win oe just tne thing for the future, if the Republi cans don't'spoil it by their convention or assembly. . But if means should be taken to unite the Republican party. on candidates that would win gen eral support, It would be awul, in deed! "The dollar buys less." This is a common remark. But you Just start out to aret a few dollars, and see if it rnsta less effort' to fet them. Yet the relation to labor Is far better for labor than it was fifty years ago. The trou- hl is all Tiersons want and will have fnr common and daily use things that were luxuries scarce obtainable fifty years ago. Therefore ' tne aouar ouys less." . Amonsr inouiries about names is that about the origin of the name of Pnmt T?lver In Kastern Oreeon. It was so-called by Peter Skene Ogden, of the Hudson's Bay company, wno was trapping on the stream about the year 1832. In the .mountains about its sources there were very large areas of burnt timber. From this circumstance he called It Burnt River. - Even if Portland's detectives cannot eatrh -rimin.ls without standing in with their stool-pigeon proteges, that argues not for the stool pigeons nor the present detectives, out tor tne ne-fejej-ftv of cnraclne new sleuths who can' round up lawbreakers by their own industry. ii th nrea. nf "nrohibition territo ry" in the United States widens, more .1 . rt OTijinev la r-nller-tert hv the United States from . the taxes on liquors. There Is a mystery here, uoes ni-nhlhltinn nrohihit? No: It is but a farce, whose side product is hypocrisy. The itnrv nf that tidal wave at LIS- hnn. nne hundred feet high, was a story which such newspapers as don't print bogus news dlon t get. un mis Winrt nf "news" -it's always easy for the genuine newspaper to "get left." More cows are needed, but those persons' are not consistent advocates of more cows wno iaiseiy cnarge inai oe tween 25 and 50 per cent of the cows In dairy use are tubercular and liable to be condemned. At Grants Pass the business men of the town have held an "assembly" and named a candidate for Mayor. This effort to "forestall the primary" is one of the many unhappy signs of these unhappy times.' Dan Shannon, evangelist, closed his meetings at Baker City Monday night by taking a collection of 31500. ' He Is said tq have made a thousand con verts. AV 31.50 per. head salvation is almost "free." , - The Oregon Dairymen's Association will meet in Portland three weeks hence. We suppose the State Board of Health will be an ex-officlo mem ber. If Pinchot is Roosevelt's vlceregent here in America he has not yet shown his credentials. Before going to Af rica, Roosevelt put Taft in charge. ' No doubt large part of Pinchot's valor comes from the thought that President Taft Is afraid of him. A bold spirit could deal with Pinchot. It may be the Danish scientists have dne more for Dr. Cook than Ameri can scientists would have done. Dr. Cook is a shrewd man." No glory in college debate any more; It Is all In college football. Naturally, students "care little for debate. WTVD MODERATES OX-: COAST Drops to Ten Miles an Hour at XortH" Head. Light Station. Wire service, partially destroyed by the storm of Thursday, was restored yes terday forenoon, and weather reports were received by the local bureau. At North Head the wind had moderated to ten miles an hour and had shifted Into the west. The steamship Catania got to sea at 11 o'clock in the morning and the Santa Clara, from San Francisco, crossed in"- a half hour later. - The steamship Breakwater, Captain Macgenn. crossed out Thursday evening In the teeth of a southeast gale. During Thursday the wind at North Head . attained a velocity of 88 miles an hour. Last evening the storm' center was drifting toward the northeast and was heaviest near the, Canadian line, north of Montana. Tbe influence was felt all along the PacITic Slope and rain was gen eral over Oregon, Washington- and Ida ho. ' The rainfall was heaviest in the vicin ity of Portland, and at this point the precipitation amounted to, .04 of an inch for the 24 hours ending at 5' o'clock last evening. Since September' l, the excess of rainfall for the section has amounted to 1.55 inches. - Light south to west winds and contin ued rains are in order for today. The offi cial forecast gives the Barometer reading responding reading at all stations in the Paciflo Northwest, xne gam oi ium day has passed to the eastward. To date few reports of damage by the gale of Thursday have been received. For a time it was feared ihat the light ship off the mouth of the, Columbia had gone adrift but as no report was received from North Head the vessel probably rode out the storm In first-class shape. At Fort Stevens the work was sus pended for several .hours on account oi the storm. Smokestacks were carried away and two water tanks demolished. The seas broke over the Jetty so that it was impossible to proceed beyond the land. Engineers have been unable to ascertain whether any of the-false work has been carried away or not.' The swell continued heavy yesterday and' no one ventured far enough out to make an exr animation. Reports received last evening from Ab erdeen. Wash., announce' the '.most se vere storm in the history of Grays Har- bor. Damage to the extent of thousands of dollars has been reported. At Hoqulam a blacksmith shop was blown down and John C. Lane, the proprietor,- was badly i the -nllnrKH of the structure. 1 Lumber pijes. signs, doors and portions 4 . i -ii.il ..-- himam into the bay.'.. OI DUIIUlHSj " - " -" - . , DAMAGE ON HARBOR IS HEAVY Shipping Demoralized, Buildings Damaged and Wires Prostrated. ABERDEEN, Wash., Nov. '19. Grays Harbor district was isolated for 24 hours up to noon today, during which the most severe storm in the history of this dis trict did damage estimated at several thousand dollars. Signs were blown down, windows in business buildings and resi dences in . Aberdeen and Hoquiam were shattered, lumber piles were scattered, ,some of the lumber being blown into the bay. John C. Lane, a blacksmith at Hoquiam, was badly injured yesterday in the col lapse ofchls blacksmith shop. The Wood Lumber Company's framework and the Elks' new building In Hoquiam were damaged. The ferry across the Hoquiam was torn from its moorings and all ship ping tied up. Wires are prostrated in every direction, and during the early part of last night Aberdeen and Hoquiam were without lights for a brief time. Newspaper offices are badly affected. The World, in Aberdeen, operated Its lino type by bicycles, and the Washingtonian, in Hoquiam, was unable t to issue this morning. -' ' ' The storm began-Wednesday afternoon, following a period of cold weather, grew In violence during the night, and reached Its height yesterday morning. It raged for- four hours, the wind at times attain ing a velocity, of 80 miles an hour, .and never dropping below 60. So strong was the wind tnat ropes were brought into play at the plant of the Western Cooper- etre fnm nftn V itn keen fin the TOOfS. The storm abated yesterday afternoon, and repairs are being made today." ( More than 450 telephones In Aberdeen are out of commission, and the Hoquiam service demoralized. Telegraph wires were raised at noon today. O. R. & X TRACKS WATCHED Mudslides Are Feared ' Because of Heavy Rains Along Columbia. unnn UTVFR rr Viir 19 -"Snerlnl.l The Columbia at this point has risen a root since morning, ana me fiooa iver and creeks in the valley are at flood stage. Unless there Is a cessation ia the heavy downpour of the past two days, it is feared that considerable damage will be done Watchmen are patrolling the- track be tween v lento ana cascaae jocks, in an ticipation of a mudslide.' A . . ... ! .-.. n l, ....1,, t.. .... f-tmrnwimAH AlilAII UIUB LV Hid V1U11UMJ WIT V C llltldl I observer, the rainfall in the past 24 hours is une.oi Lilts jjeuviesk un njcuru uere. SAXTTAM IS RISIXG RAPIDLY Heavy Rains and Warm Winds Melt - Snow In Linn County. ALBANY, Or., Nov. 19. (Special.) Fed by the rains of the past two days and the melting M fresh snow which fell In last week's storm, the South Santiam River ia rising rapidly all along its course through Linn County. It has risen, four feet in the last 24 hours, and at the pres ent rate will reach flood stage tomor row. No damage is reported yet. ' The Willamette has not yet begun to rise rapidly here, but with the Santiam and other mountain streams approaching flood stage, high water in the Willamette may be expected In a day or two. COWLITZ RISES EIGHT FEET River at Castle Rock Is Filled With Logs and Shingle Bolts. v KELSO, Wash., Nov. 19. (Special.) As a result of the chlnook winds on the snow at the headwaters of the Cowlitz, the river rose again today 8 feet, bring ing the river higher than two weeks ago. Reports irom. aaimon ureeK ana Tuttle River show the streams are 4 feet above the former mark, which means that tie river . here will rise consider ably tonight. At Castle Rock tne river was iiuea with shingle bolts and logs during the afternoon, many of which came out or Salmon Creek. No damage Is reported as yet. WIRES DOWN FOR 8 6 HOURS Nooksack Dangerously Near High- water Mark in Whatcom County. TjF.T.T.TVawAM -Wash-. Nov. 19. (Spe cial.) Bellingham has been practically cut off from the outside for 36 hours. owing to telephone and teiegrapn wires going down in the gala of yesterday. A few wireless" messages were received last night. The Nooksack River is running aan gerously near the high water mark, and some lowlands and meadow roads are al ready under water. County brldees are in danger. , . , . , JfAXY ARE ISJURED I MUa Damage in Seattle Will Amount to '.; ; Thousands of Dollars. SEATTLE, Nov. 10. (Special.) When the sum ).otal of. the losses inflicted upon Seattle property by the gale which seized the Pacific "Northwest in its grip yes-, terday and continued today, thopgh somewhat abated, is computed, damage running Into the thousands will be recorded.- v However, no toll was levied on human life, although , many persons received minor injuries and scores experienced narrow escapes. R. A. Campbell, a guard at the Alaska-YukOn-Pacific Exposition grounds, nar rowly escaped death from a falling tree yesterday. While walking through the grove near the rustic bridge which leads to the landing on Lake Washington he was warned "by the cracking of a big fir near at hand. Glancing up he saw the giant tree tottering toward him and he leaped from the spot Just before the tree fell. . STORM OX SOUXD FREAKISH Wind Blows From, Every Direction i of Compass, Skippers Say. -. VANCOUVER, B. C Nov. 19. (Spe cial.) This city- weu5 well cut off from the outside world "last night by the storm which ewept Seattle' and vicinity, and. to day neither telegraph nor telephone com munication, could be- obtained further than Belllngham or Victoria except by way of Winnipeg. Local skippers reported that the action of wind on Puget. Sound and in the Gulf of Georgia last night was most Unusual, In that it seemed to blow from every di rection of the compass, changing from one, to the other rapidly. None of the local fleet was damaged. PACIFIC COASTERS WIX GAME Wafer Polo Contest Goes Against Northwestern Boys. Portland's baseball colony continues to enjoy the sport of water polo, for yes terday afternoon the Pacific Coast Leaguers, arrayed against the Northwest ern.players, won a hard-fought aquatic game by the score of 3 to 1. It was the second game the ball-tossers have played in the Portland swimming tank, and the boys seem to enjoy the sport immensely The teams lined up as follows: Pacific Coast Jack Graney, Roger Cor nell, Charley Armbruster, "Speck" Hark ness. M. Walsh and Jack Kirk. North western Pearl Casey, Fred Adams, Ote Johnson, Tom Sane, Joe Stutt and Eddie Davey.' Father Reveals Son as Slayer. . PUEBLO, Colo., Nov. 19. An effort is to be made to obtain the pardon of Charles Barr, now in the prison at Canyon City, for holding up a streetcar here, so that he can be taken to Nevada and tried for the murder of Deputy Sheriff William Larkin, of Humboldt. The identification of C. C. Collins as Barr was made yesterday by San Francisco officers through letters written by Barr's father under an assumed name. Seattle Man Found Dead. TACOMA, Nov.. 19. The man found dead on a Northern Pacific flat car at Puyallup last night has been identified as James Ross, a longshoreman of Seat tie. His companion eays they started to beat their way from Tacorita to' Seattle and "Ross went to join some young fel lows on another part of the train. That's the last he saw of- him. ; It Is the theory of the police he was shot , by hobos In an effort to rob him. Dallas to Get Union Depot. SALEM, Or.. Nov. 19. (Special.) State Railroad . Commissioner West has Just re turned from Dallas, Pork County, where he has ben looking over the depot faclll ties of the several roads entering that city. As a result of his trip, the Commis sion has taken up with the roads the proj ect of the construction of a union depot at Dallas" for the use and benefit of all the roads entering the town. Eruption Causes Panic. MADRID. Nov. 19. Advices received from Teneriff e state that the activity' of the volcano that appeared In the moun tains of LasFlores continued for only five minutes,, but that villagers on the island .were panic-stricken. Other mountains are giving evidence of volcanic activity. Coos Bay Injunction Argued. MARSHFIELD, Or., Nov. 19. (Special.) Judge CoTte, of the Circuit Court, today heard in chambers arguments in the pe tition to have dissolved the injunction against the Commissioners of the Port of Coos Bay restraining them fr.om levying taxes or Issuing bonds. It will probably bo several days before the Judge gives his decision. -Father Joyce Assigned. VANCOUVER, Wash., Nov. 19. (Spe cial.) Father Joyce, formerly chaplain at Fort Walla Walla, has -been- detailed to the Fourth Field Artillery in Vancouver, Barracks ana nas oraers io remain nere after that organization leaves for Fort Russell, Wyo., early in December. Father Joyce is now at Vancouver Bar racks. - Telegraph Officials to Keep Places. NEW, YORK, Nov. . 19. Authoritative announcement 'was made today by of ficials of the American Telephone & Tele graph Company that there would be no change in the official personnel of the Western Union i Telegraph Company by reason of the transfer of the oontrol of that company to the American Telephone & Telegraph Company. . Gas Franchise Accepted. , CHEHALIS, Wash., Nov. fb. (Spe cial.) W. W. Seymour, of Tacoma, has filed his acceptance of the gas franchise that was recently granted him by the Council. A deposit of $1000 has been filed as an evidence of good faith. Mr. Seymour and his associate. Mr. Brewer, have a franchise at Centralia. McCredle Has Big Lead. MONTESANO. Wash., Nov. 19. (Spe cial.) An offiotftl canvass of the votes cast at the special Congressional election shows that Judge McCredie's majority In Chehalis County was 611. The votes stood as follows: McCredle, 951; Lister, 340; Herman, 116; Hailan., 55: Rockwell, 32; Carlson, 17. Total vote, 1511. j. New Company Incorporated. SALEM, Or... Nov. 19. (Special.) Arti cles of incorporation were filed in the office .of tlje Secretary of State today for the' McGrath & Neuhausen Company, of Portland, with a capital stock of $100,000. The incorporators are T. S. 'McGrath, T. B. Neuhausen and James Cole. Eliot's Successor Ia Chosen. PHILADELPHIA. Nv. 19. Provost Charles C. Harrison, of the University of -Pennsylvania, accepted today the chairmanship of trustees of the Carnegie Foundation for the Ad-ancement of Teaching. He succeeds Dr. Charles W. 'Sllot, ex-president of Harvard. .; . '- . Assemblies to Be Held efesnary tor Guidnnre to Party Action and Suggestion of Candi dates for domination. Notice the Matter. Gerv-ais Weekly Star. Republican assemblies ' over" the- state will- be held 'the coming Spring to select and place in nomination candidates for county offices. Also to elect delegates to a state assembly to suggest candidates for the various.state offices. This is per fectly proper and timely? as the state pri mary law recognizes parties and party fealty, and permits such nominations by mass meetings. As a matter of history,, the only polit ical party in the state that has strictly heretofore carried out. the letter of the law in this matter has been Republicans. All other political parties have nominated by mass meetings. It Is thus seen, that this sentiment foe. assemblies is nothing new, but has been' participated In by all other political parties save the Reptib- licans. Other parties hnve ' fnllowea this plan and will continue to do mo bo lonir nu it milts their convenience. There is no reason under the law why Republicans cannot hold assem blies or any other style of mass con vention they may wish. They will surely do so and place befrTo the peo ple for ratification the very best men they can recommend for all offices, both state and county. The people can elect or reject at the coming Novem ber election. Republicans will stand upon their plntform and win or lone aa such and no longer brook outside Influence. It Is not expected that other than Republicans will partici pate. There are enough true, tried nnd loyal Republican voters In the state to elect, if such a course is pursued, and competent, well-known electors placed upon the ticket, to be voted for by Republicans. v Let the slogan be: "Republicans for Republicans"; all else is un-Re-publlcan. x A Struggle for Life. Oregon Observer, Grants Tass. The question of Republican assem blies or conventions to recommend can didates for the primary elections next year is still being debated in the news papers of the State, although the prop osition seems to have passed the stage of debate. It has. In fact, been accepted by all sincere Republicans, and It quite certain that such assemblies will be held when the time comes. The very existence of the Republican, party In Oregon depends upon that. Of .course, there Is loud objection from Democrats, who cry "machine," whiles In fact the Democratic party never abandoned Its "machine," and never worked with the primary election law. 'It Is all right for them absolutely to choose their candidates, but all wrong' for Republicans even to recom mend candidates for the voters to pass Judgment upon at the primary. Tho fact Is that, by false registration, the Democrats have become accustomed to take an active part In Republican nom inations, and the fraud has been so advantageous to them that they appear to have persuaded themselves that they have a right to help Republicans choose candidates, while they do not need any help to choose their own. A little coterie of Democrats meet, the candi dates are chosen and the job Is done. But it Is all wrong for Republicans to do anything like that. Yet aa long aa Republican ara within the law, the method adopted by that party foff the nomination of candidates is really no part of the business of the Democratic or any other political party. Each party, according to the primary law, has its specific party rights, not to be Interfered with by other parties. There is where the law fails. The Dem ocrats systematically interfere with the rights of the Republicans, and it is precisely this unlawful interference that Republicans propose to prevent by holding meetings, or conventions, .of reputable members of the party to choose, without Interference by oppos ing parties, desirable candidates for the Republican voters to approve or disap prove at the primary. It ia entirely a mat ter of aclf-prolection againai poinu-ui raaeallty by opaoncnta. The Repub lican party must either eecure this pro tection or break up. It proposes to help itself by means of recommending con ventions In entire conformity with the primary law, all constitutional law and .all natural law. These conventions will in no way interfere with the pri mary law, but will do a service for the Republican voters of Oregon that they are much In need of,. namely, the recommending of desirable candidates for their approval or otherwise. That's all. Just the exercise of a common right, that is now, and always has been, exercised by every political party in the State (except Republicans of late years), and that in no way af fects the right of any voter secured to him by the primary law or any other law. Check This Kolly. The Dalles Optimist.- It has ' been the eUstom from the earliest history of parties in this coun try for each party to go into a cam paign upon what we are pleased to call a platform. But in Oregon the reformers have found a better way. as they assume, in which we are supposed to go into the campaigns without any avowed principles. Wo are supposed to-let each man who aspires to an oi flce to run on any old issue he sees fit, while the party as a whole is not sup posed to be at- all Interested. There mav he treat State or National issues at stake Oregon does not side for or against them, our political parties not helue suDDOsed to nave any creca oi faith except to get the offices. But so far as the itepunncan party of Oregon is concerned, we propose to change our attitude next year. We propose to go into the next campaign with certain fixed idea and certain fixed principles. We are going to call a convention to adopt a 'platform-, and if the Democrats think they can keep us from doing that they have another think coming. Some of our brethren call it an assemblage, but The Optimist would rather call it by the good old name a convention. We will get no more abuse for calling It by its right name than for calling it hy any of the advisory cognomens suggested. As to what else the convention will do. may be Judged from. the past; with only the difference' that our nomina tions will not be final, hut will have to be passed upon at the primaries election. And perhaps, this is a wise consideration, for it will make us the more careful to select our. very besL men. Of course the Democrats will, as usual, hold no convention. No. they don't need to: they will make their nominations in secret and pass the word down the line, just as they will as to which of the Republican candidates they are to vote for at the primaries. They will, of course, do all in their power to renominate Bourne, but the foxy Jonathan will find that his strength with the Democrats will be his- undoing next year. i