TITE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, DECE3IBER 11, 1921 110 IS INFORMED OF PACT ON PACIFIC Anglo-Japanese Treaty Sent to Scrap Heap. COMPACT FOR 10 YEARS Four Powers Are to Respect Island Possessions or Each Other. Lodge Heads Text. (Cnntlnufd From First Pag? ) tonight as to characterize today's session as "practically the breakup of the conference" as far as major considerations are concerned. One of tne first Impulses of some senators was to compare and con trast the treaty with the league of nations covenant. By an American official spokesman It was pointed out that a feature of the league ""venant is omitted from the four-power peace agreement. Iu article 10 of the league the members agreed to "respect and preserve each o'her's territorial integrity,'' but in the new treaty the pledge la to "re spect" territorial rights In the Pa clflc. Omission of the guarantee to pre serve "the integrity qt foreign na tions is declared By tne American delegates to constitute an all-lmpor- tant distinction between an alliance and a compact for peaceful solution of future controversies. The text of the treaty follows: "The United States of America, the British Empire, France and Japan. "With a view to the preservation of the general peace and the mainte nance of their rights In relation to their insular possessions and Insular dominions In the region of the Pa cific ocean. Trrnty lit Concluded. "Have determined to conclude a treaty to this effect and have ap pointed as their plenipotentiaries: "The president of the United States of America. "His majesty, the king of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and of the British dominions beyond the seas, Emperor of India. "And for the dominion of Canada. "For the commonwealth of Aus tralia. "For the dominion of New Zealand. "For India. , "The president of the French re public. "His majesty, the emperor of Japan. "The parties having communicated their full powers, found in good and due form, have agreed as follows: "Article 1 The high contracting parties agree as between themselves to respect their rights In relation to their Insular possessions and insular dominions in the regions of the Pa cific ocean. "If there should develop betweer. any of the high contractus parties a controversy arising out of any Pa cific question and involving their said rights which is not satisfactorily settled by diplomacy and Is likely to affect the harmonious accord now happily subsisting between them they snail invite the high contracting par ties to a Joint conference, to which the whole subject will be referred for consideration and adjustment. Frank Exchange Required. "Article 2 If the said rights are threatened by the aggressive action of any other power, the high contract ing parties shall communicate with one another fully and frankly in or der to arrive at an understind'r.g as to the most efficient measures to be taken, Jointly and separately, to meet the exigencies of the particular situ ation. "Article 3 This agreement shall re main In force for ten years from the time it shall take effect and aftdr the expiration of said period it shall con tinue to be in .force subject to the right of any of the high contracting parties to terminate It upon 12 months' notice. "Article 4 This agreement shall be ratified as soon as possible In accord ance with the constitutional methods of the high contracting parties and hall take effect on the deposit of rati fications, which shall take place at Washington, and thereupon the agree ment between Great Britain and Ja pan, which was concluded at London on July 13, 1911, shall terminate." Yap Negotiations Factor. In presenting the treaty Senator Lodge said it had been accepted by the United States subject to a satis factory conclusion of the negotiations proceeding over Yap and also with reservations relative to the mandat ed Islands south of the equator. It was explained by American spokes men later that the attitude of the American government upon mandates had been in no way modified by the treaty. The conference also gave formal arproval to several resolutions on Chinese problems, adopted by the far eastern committee of the whole. The "four points" of Ellhu Root, the dec laration on ixtra-territoriality and the agreements relative to China's neu trality nil future treaties affecting him were Included in the resolutions spread formally on the records. Although the plenary session occu pied the attention of the delegates until after noon, the Japanese and Chinese met and reported consider able progress In Shantung negotia tions Next week the far eastern committee will resume Its delibera tions and it is possible another ple nary session will be held early next week to record the agreement on naval ratio. The hour devoted by the conference to "the four-party treaty const'tuted a memorable chapter In the history oi diplomacy. Assembled about the big green table in Continental hall, flanked by their advisers and by gal leries packed with the notables of many nations, the plenlpotent'ar'es expressed their realization of the im port of the new International align ment. Lodge Talks With Emphasis. Senator Lodge's address was deliv ered with an emnhasls which kept delegates and spectators hanging on his every word. Rene Viviani, war minister of France, voicing the devo tion of his government to oeace and concord, rose to passages so eloquent that, although he spoke in French, the hall was swept repeatedly by ap plause. In the clear style so strongly char acteristic of British oratory, A. J. Bal four related why Great Britain was to lay aside her alliance with Japan to accept a place In a broader circle of friendly nations, and Prince Toku gawa, speaking for Japan, summed tin a few sentence; the gratification of his country at the turn of affairs. Applause from delegates greeted Senator Lodge's delineation of the new treaty as an agreement based on good faith, "with no military or naval sanction" lurking in the background. Repeatedly he was applauded as he went on to declare that a new day of international understanding had made '"this great experiment" pos sible and to appeal "to the men and women of the nations to help us sus tain it In spirit and ih truth." Wfcen he finished the handclapping contin ued for more than a minute. France's Sufferings Related. M. Vivian! recounted the sufferings of his people in the war to emphasize1 the national devotion to Instruments 'of peace. France, he added, would be ready always to keep her word, and, although she knew the price of con flict, would not hesitate to "seal with blood" any agreement which she en tered. Turnjng to the Anglo-Japanese alli ance, Mr. Balfour declared Great Brit aln was well aware of the suspicion in America because the two-power arrangement had been continued after causes for It had disappeared in the collapse of Germany and Rus sia, but the associations of 20 years, he continued, were not easily broken, and that break was compensated only by the merging of the old relation ship into one of broader import that would bring satisfaction to every part of the empire. "All Japan," Prince Tokugawa said, would likewise rejoice over the new arrangement. although, he added that the Japanese reciprocated the British expressions of appreciation over results of the old alliance Rep resentatives of other nations confined themselves to simple declarations of approval except in the case of China Minister Sze adding that it was to be supposed the treaty would be "sup plementeiby a further convention to which all the powers, including China, will be parties." China Is Not Affected. In outlining the scope of the four power agreement, the speakers em phasized that it is to apply only to the Pacific Islands and in no way to China or any other part of the Asiatic mainland. In the view of some American delegates, It applies not only to Hawaii, which American naval althorlties always have re garded as a part of the American mainland, because It is a vortex of the Pacific "defensive triangle," but also to all of the islands which make up the Japanese empire. A British spokesman said that, al though the Japanese, group was to be regarded as within the provisions of the treaty, those belonging to the Netherlands 'were not to be consid ered as coming under the agrement. because the government was not a party to It. In the same way, this spokesman said, the minor - islands under Chinese sovereignty lay outside the treaty stipulations. TREATY 1 ONLY GREAT OMEN Bigger Things to Come Out of Alliance, Says Writer. Young men only I who have the ambition to enter College are urged to see Mr. Burkhead at the Oregon Institute of Technology, 4th f loor Y. M. C. A., tomorrow with out fail . . . . School Starts! Baker to Finance Condcnsary. BAKER. Or., Dec. 10. .Special.) The establishment of a new milk con- densary plant of the Commercial Creamery company of Haines will be supported and financed in. Baker, If plans of that company conform with requirements of the local chamber, it was decided today at a meeting of a special committee of the chamber of commerce appointed to investigate the proposition. The company will be asked to set forth Its desires in a financial way and submit Its plans for the new institution in Baker, It was announced. combining individu ality and dignity, color and character, beauty and utility. Large and small weavings in mat and room sizes, pillows, runners, mural pieces, oriental brass lamps, unique and useful desk accessories await your consider ation. We assure you nothing will be left undone to ease the t a s k of Christmas shopping and to In sure absolute satis faction for yourself and for the recipients of your good will. Cartozian Bros m . m Jljj 303 WahlnKton St.. JtJ gjj PORTLAND Jg PACT MAKES ALL HAPPY Vital' Questions of Pacific Are Xot Touched On, But Moral Effect Is There. BY ADACHI KINNOSUKE. WASHINGTON, D. O.. Dec. 10. (Special.) What we had this morn ing Is not a great treaty. It Is only great as a dramatic curtain-raiser to a gigantic world drama. All the im portant thing in fact really mean ingful things about the four-power treaty are outside of it, 'or around the rim of it. The first Japanese reactions to It are: Never mind the treaty. What Is Important Is in the very fact that these highty powers America, Great Britain, France and Japan can and did come together in a treaty binding them to work together, at least, even if the treaty steers care fully away from any obligations on their part to incur an actual fighting obligation if things take a grave turn. It makes little difference, therefore, If the Instrument avoids with the canny care of an ancient prophet the cyclone center of tur moil otherwise known as continental Asia. America Declared Chanfred. From the standpoint of the Jap anese delegation here, it is a proud achievement. They have convinced the United States that the Japan ot today is not the Japan of the popular American imagination of a few years ago. which pictured our people as a race of fierce creature sitting up nights concocting all sorts of yellow turmoil with which to turn the waters of the Pacific crimson. Another thing over which the Jap anese headquarters here is singing "Kimi Ka Yo" is the happy and de cent burial for the classic Anglo Japanese alliance, which lias been achieved. The Japanese sentiment about the old treaty was pretty much an oriental version of the slang of tne colored gentleman who had a "possum by the tail." For some years that is to say, since the disappear ance of Germany from Kiachow Japan has been trying to be polite to England and true to her own feeling about the alliance at one and the same time. It has proved to be pretty nearly equivalent to calling black white ajt one and the same time. Treaty Stirs lp Sentiment. Now a funeral is a painful rite at best and a treaty sometimes comes to take on a good deal of human sen timent about It. In fact, it has been said that an old treaty like tne Anglo-Japanese alliance is about the only human thing in that mausoleum of ossified personages called the for eign, office of Japan. That explains the reason for the tremendous sigh of relief which has been rising from the care-4aden breasts of the Japan ese headquarters on Massachusetts avenue all this afternoon; Any schoolboy understands that the four-cornered understanding so ably stage-managed by Senator Lodge does not take the place of the Anglo Japanese alliance. Everyone Is Happy. The headlines of all the newspapers of all the civilized countries In the world are about the only ones which are saying so. The alliance covered the storm centers of the east. The present understanding proposes to loaf where the summer never dies and amid the countless rocky points In the Pacific, where even the can nibals are being civilized out of their old practices. But the great international fact In Washington tonight is: The Japanese are happy the Americans are congrat ulating everyone, the British are all smiles, and so are "the rest of the people here. Who can say, then, tha" this is not an introduction to a really mighty chapter to comje? ELOPERS ARE HEADED OFF MARRIAGE F SALEM COUPLE PREVENTED BY SHERIFF. School Girl and Fiance Arrested at Vancouver License Bureau and Cupid Deserts Them. VANCOUVER, Wash.. , Dec. 10. (Special.) While Joy came to a dozen couples making a pilgrimage to Van couver today to be m.rrled, grief overtook one couple from Salem. Or. They were compelled to sit In the sheriff's office for hours and hours, and they did not. feel like talking much. Rex E. Howard. 22, a band sawyer of Salem, and Miss Cordelia Stuart, a schoolgirl of the same city, arrived here about noon in company of Mrs. Jennie Howard of 1237 Marlon street, SaJem. Mrs. Howard Is the mother of the would-be bridegroom. The parents of the girl, missing her this morning, scented an elopement, and sought the aid of the chief of police of Salem, who telephoned the authorities here asking that the li cense be not issued, as the girl was but 16 years old. Nelson Steel, dep uty sheriff, took the trio In charge and kept them in the sheriffs office, where they were held until an officer from Salem came and took them back. When questioned in the auditor's office, the girl said she was 18 yearn old and that her parents had nothing to say about what.she did. She loved Rex and she wanted to marry him. and she thought it very unkind of her parents to interfere In her future. Incidentally, she shed copious tears. Instead of destroying cigars and cigarettes seized by the government for tax delinquency. It is proposed In Washington. D- C, to turn over the supply to hospitals In which disabled soldiers are quartered. Ackerman Portrait Presented. OREGON NORMAL SCHOOL. Mon mouth. Or., Dec. 10. (Special.) A large framed portrait of the late J. H. Ackerman was recently presented to the normal school by the teachers of Lane county. It was first exhibited at the Lane county aehers' institute, held recently in Eugene. when tributes to Mr. Ackerman's work were given by leading educators. It was said that he had been present at the Lane county Institute every year for 15 years. Among the teachers of Lane are many normal graduates. onoc o I o loxaoi IOC30L IQE3QI 30C10E SOI its n TODAY -BanflEflMsBSk- Mm ansss Bbsm 'saHQsar" 'sbJPHK HsaT I I 8 L aai v I fi y'nrsl twSl. till WB 11 Kil'l Wit A m t 1 J -J S 1 4 hHHbI CHRISTMAS Victor Records And Other Victor Records You Have Wanted Oh Come. All Ye Faithful :. Trinity Choir $0.86 Joy to the World Silent Night. Hallowed Night..., Elsie Baker Hark! the Herald Angels Sing Trinity Choir 86 Silent Night, Hallowed Night Hayden Quartet 85 Will There Be Any Stars In My Crown? Christmas Hymns Selection Francis J. Lapltlno Silent Night. Holy Night ' Neapoftan Trio 85 It Came Upon the Midnight Clear Victor Mixed Chorus 1.35 Sing, O Heavens Angels From the Realms of Glory Trinity Choir 1.35 Oh, Little Town of Bethlehem Peerless Quartet Christmas Light. Behold Percy Hemus 135 Ring Out. Wild Bells Arthur Pryor's Band YuletI4e A Christmas Fantasia Frank Croxton 1-35 Nazareth Christmas Song Harry MacDonough The Star of Bethlehem Trinity Choir 1.35 Savior. When Night . Involves the Skies. Cora Mel Patten The Night Before Christmas Georgene Faulkner 135 Gingerbread Boy A Hunt In the Black Forest Victor Orchestra 1 35 In a Clock Store i Holy Night Lucy Marsh ". Silent Night. Holy Night Trinity Choir 1 00 Babes In Toyland Victor Herbert's Orchestra.. 1.50 Naughty Marietta Intermezzo Oh Come. All Ye Faithful scnumann-tieinK no Stllle Nacht, helllge Nacht Julia Culp 126 Silent Night. Holy Nigh Gluck-Reimers 150 Cantlque de Noel (Holy Night) Caruso 1.75 Adeste Fideles McCormack 1.76 Nazareth Werrenrath 176 Cantlque de Noel (Holy Ni'ght) Journet '. 1.76 I Stllle Nacht. hellige Nacht Schumann-Heink . . i 176 Poitcr Design by Irwin 11. Henoch Prices ARE , r down-buy HOW day 's work will buy as much today as it ever would Sam'l Rosenblatt & Co. The home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes Fifth and Alder Gasco Building loxaoc IOQOE locaoc IODOC 30E30I 301 I Red Seal Victor Records You Have Wanted A-Dream Caruso 1 O Sole Mlo (My Sunshine) Caruso' 1 Parted (Tosti) Caruso 1 For You Alone Caruso 1 RIgoletto (Woman Is Fickle) Caruso 1 Pagliacci (On With the Play) Caruso 1 The Lost Chord Caruso 1. Campane a Sera (Ave Maria) Caruso '. 1 1. Elegie (Massenet) Caruso-EIman r-. . . 1 Ave Maria (Kahn) Caruso-EIman 1 Trovatore Miserere Caruso-Alda 2 Trovatore Home to Our Mountains Caruso-Homer 2 Trovatore Home to Our Mountains Caruso-Schumann RIgoletto Quartet Caruso-Abott-Homer-Scottl.. 3. Lucia Sextet . -, Caruso-Galli Curci-Egemer-DeLuca-Journet. . 3. Lucia Sextet Caruso-Semb'rich-Scottl-Journet-Daddi S Lucia Sextet Caruso-Tetrazinni-Amato-Journet-Jacoby . ... 3. That Tumble-Down Shack in Athlone McCormack 1 Honour and Love McCormack 1, When You and I Were Young. Magajie McCormack 1 Learn to Smile McCormack 1. O Cease Thy Singing. Maiden Fair McCormack-KreisIer 1 Silver Threads Among the Gold McCormack Where tire River Shannon Flows.. (0 McCormack '. j.... Somewhere .a Voice Is Calling McCormack My Wild Irish Rose McCormack Nightingale Song .....Gluck . Carry Me Back to Old Vlrginny Gluck-Male Chorus ... Aloha Oe Gluck-Orpheus Quartet The Lost Chord Gluck-Zlmballst Angels' Serenade Gluck-Zimbalist 1 a a. Banjo Song Mme. HAner-Miss Homer 1 The Home Road Schumann-Heink : 1 Love's -Messenger Waltz . .Galll-Curci , 1 ConnambUla Could I Believe Galli-Curcl 1 Oinorah (Shadow Song) Galli-Curcl . 1 The Last Rose of Summer : Galli-Curci 1, Nocturne (Chopin) .... Padecewskl I, ! ' 1 - 1 1 1. --k'sll M irch Violin Klman Humoresque Elman . . Song Without Words Elman ... Souvenir Violin Zimbalist Serenade '. ,. .Zimbalist 1 Ave Maria Violin Heifets J Caprice Viennois (Kreisler) Viofln Krelsler . 1 Beautiful Isle of Somewhere Williams .' l race to race Williams l Love's Old Sweet Song Whltehlll .'. l. .25 25 .25 25 25 .75 75 75 00 00 oo oo 00 00 50 50 50 25 25 26 25 50 26 2 25 25 25 75 75 So 00 50 25 25 75 76 75 75 25 75 75 25 26 75 75 26 76 5 Prompt Mailing Service in This Beautiful VICTROLA and 10 Double-Face Victor Records, Needles, etc., '258 SPECIAL TERMS UNTIL XMAS Victrolas $25 and Up Everything Musical 125-127 Fourth Street, Betwe en Washington and Alder Sts. Tools for Christmas Gifts Tools for Men and Boys -.- . Tools for Manual Training Scholars Why not make your boy a present of a fine Chest or Cabinet of Tools? We open at 8 A. M. We clone at S :30 P. M. We are open Saturday afternoons. The day that any boy becomes the owner of a set of real tools something happens. The boy becomes a man. Every home needs a well-filled chest of good tools they always come handy. Our holiday display of Tools is the largest and finest ever shown in 4be city and includes all the best-known brands on the market. FOR BAYS AND MEN Chests of Tools priced from $7.50 to $25.00 Cabinets of Tools priced from $32.50 to $85.00 Scroll Saws and Turning Lathes Wood and Iron Planes Fret Saws Back Saws Fine Machinists' Tools Work Benches Fine Hand and Rip Saws Coping Saws Fine Carpenter Tools Machinists' Tool Boxes Let us help you make your selections. Our store is quickly and easily reached by automobile with plenty of parking space and a "No Time Limit" in which to do your shopping. N. S. cars pass our doors, with Broadway, Mississippi and St. Johns cars near at hand. Shop with us and avoid the uptown congestion and danger of accident. SEE OUR SHOW WINDOW DISPLAYS Honeyman Hardware Company Park at Glisan At the Sign of the Grindstone and Anchor One block west of new Postoffice Near Broadway Bridge PHONE YOUR WANT ADS TO THE OREGON1AN