Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The times. (Portland, Or.) 191?-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1912)
THE TIMES THE TIM ES The committee on industrial education of the National Metal I fades Association, in its report at the recent conventiorl. states its Lubliahed every Saturday by TH E TIM E S COMPANY, I ncorporated '■diet that, to a considerable extent, our labor difficulties can be at 212 First Street, Portland, Oregon. Phones. Main 5C37 7; A-26*fl. traced to lack of efficiency; and that a cure can he found only in a chan ¡re to increased intelligence, from incompetence to competence, THE TIM ES is not responsible for any opinions expr*. by correspondents "o this end. it advocates the furtherance of National and State pol- appearing in its columns. ! ieies in extending aid for industrial education and also recommends the continuance by the Association of financial support to the Xa- Entered in Pt at Portland, Oregon, >ud < ' ¡onal Society for the Promotion of Industrial Education. D IR E C T O R Y of Portland's ORRIN E. STANLEY SI BS* R IPTIO N RATES— $2.50 per year, in advance. AD VE R TISIN G RATES made known upon application. Saturday,June 8, 1912 W E LC O M E T H E M A C H IN E J. H. MORTON, M. E. INDUSTRIAL M. Am. Suc. C. E. A FEARLESS E X PO N E N T OF IN D U S T R IA L PEACE " I never knew an early-rising, hard-working, prudent man. care ful of his earnings, and strictly honest, who complained o f bad luck. ” — Addison. Leading Business Firms. ENGINEERING ADVISER. DRAFTING AND B L U E P R IN T IN G . Telephone Marshall 1554. Phone Main 1622. 824 Chamber of Commerce, Portland, Oregon. 924 Chamber of Commerce, Portland, Oregon. ! there been as much advancement in I.W.W PLAN TO j the way of improvement* and new in- C. J. WILSON I dustries. MAKE FIGHT IN NORTHWEST LIMIT FOR INITIATIVE CLOSE that I < »114 if tin mistakes labor makes is opposing mechanical which increase production of the individual. Often we hear organized labor has lent itself to the defeat o f adoption of a new CARTOONIST. th Increase Your ICON NEWS NOTES GF GENERAL INTEREST Throughout check over me names_ Planters have been urged to burn part of their cotton crop, in order to enhance the market value o f the remainder. With the same object, part of a coffee crop lias been burned; and we believe there are other instances of deliberate destruction for the purpose o f con verting an nvcrsupply into an iiudcrsiipply and boosting prices, for it is a regret a hie fact that the world will pay you more for producing a little less than it wants of a given commodity than it will for produe mg a little more than it wants. Hunting good cotton or good coffee, or any other tiling, the pro diietion o f which costs much effort, and the use of which i" profitahh to man, goes against (lie grain o f human nature, however. It seems essentially immoral and a rank flying in the face of bountiful Provi dence. So far as we remember, labor is the only good commodity which habitually burns itself up in order to maintain a remunerative market price. A report happens to ln> at limn I containing official re turns of strikes and lockouts in various European countries. The statistics for Great Britain. Era lire and Austria arc made up in much the same form A four year average shows that about eight million days' work are annually lost in those three nations through strikes. That much labor is burned up every year. With three hundred work ing day" in the year, we have the equivalent of twenty seven thousand workmen perpetually idle for Ibis cause. 'I'o an impartial observer, it would seem that labor is the very last eoinmodity that should be burned up Saturday Evening Post. CIVIL AND HYDRAULIC ENGINEER. General Surveying, Landscape Engineering, Construction Superintendence, Reports ami Estimates on Projects, Water Supply, Ir r i gation, Sewerage. Only One Bill Ready to go Before Res. Phone E 6185. 348 Market Street, Portland, Oregon. Phones: Main 5645. Voters out of 40 to 50 Discussed. Lumber Exchange Building. Salem.— Although there are between j - - - - - - - - - - - — - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - re- 40 and 50 measure* under the initla- machine which will • lirninat** a portion of the workmen formerly re-1 ^to^i^atUe^i^Latea?Re nuired. As an immediate justification, it is said hv tin* laboring man ■ i i / w i i *? w i . . .• I IHH^I I AM. Wash.— As the that lie has a right to stand against a system which cuts some of his i stilt of a conference o f 1 \V \V fellows out of employment. | leaders, held in Seattle recently J a !° bringing them before the Here is where a mistaken philosophy prompts labor to hit** itself. plan of I hoinas Ilalero, mem-1 ^ * Nottmber it seems prob able that many of these will never Lahor never was given a more welcome heijuest by society than ma* i her of tin* general board of direc tors. , , <«.rs. is .s sail sam to have been adopted. ! * ? h, ,be haUot tbrvugb a fallure ,0 . b m . s w h i r l , save human energy and multiply the production of t h . | T(lis p|MII |>r„ vi(i(.s f(„. movi * al| ta,t,ate ln time- imli\ ¡dual, Harnessing forces o f Xaturi and placing them al the i uf the agitators from San Diego!, 1 “ ’ier ,h<‘ law' July 4 W|H be the from the I ^ P « « ‘on- hack o f the rare is in fact tin- vorv framework and foundation of ! to Seattle a n d ....... progress latter city an agitation for a strike i “ 1 " ? ' m 5' ‘8 last day tin Northwest com-1 ° nWh,ChfaVOrablearKumen,8ioranjr 1 7 . . . . . where . . . . bearers are „ the . .... ..... 11iiroiigboiit throughout the Iii ( ( L hum „ th ere are districts coolie . , measure may be filed. This g ive« a ¡carers transpor- mcncing August 1 1 is planned , comparativejy ehort time ior secur- tation medium fo r heavy freight. Thes powerful laborers trudge to move the Grav Harbor head- lns over r.ames on petitions for day after day with packs on their shoulders. 'They would Ifitvi the quarters from iln<|uiam to Centra- | bili same right in protest against tin- use of horses, camels, boats, nr steam lia. and to divert to that point all The only bill so far received Is a Inenmotives that any laborer lias tn refuse admission of a labor-sav money now going to Sail Diego j proposed constitutional amendment An investigation indicates that the ing machine. One horse would displace three coolie bearers, lint membership among loggers and | providing for woman's suffrage. July j 2- is the last day on which arguments freight conveyed is made cheaper to the consumer by the horse, three sawmill employes is falling off. opposing any measure may be receiv human beings are given opportunity to rise to a higher level than ed. and September 11 is the last day were beasts of burden, ami a step in civilized progress is recorded. j for the secretary of state to mail out initiative and referendum pamphlets. Displacing a man who lias a position is unpleasant. It can onlj Secretary Olcott fears that there hi- justified by the general good. Labor um|ilestionab)y has the right' will be such a rush of petitions at the In demand as machines enter and the power of the individual is in | last moment it w ill be practically im- creased. larger earnings. It was upon this principle that, when the P . ble for the clerks in the office to articulated Mallet locomotives, doing twice the duty nf the former Events Occurring mogul, were put on certain railway lines, the engineers asked for a the State During the Past Gcbhardt is Freed. substantial increase in pay for operating them. No more labor was Oregon City.— Following a dramatic Week. reipiired to handle one Mallet than the single type preceding, but the hearing. Justice of the Peace SamsoD dismissed the charge of murder engineers lelt that a portion of the increased earnings being assured Mining Oates Postponed. against August Gebhardt. The court by invention and progress should go to labor, which is right, in some Baker.— Word was received by the held that Gebhardt shot and killed measure which society has never yet seen fit to apportion. B ik er commercial club from L. D. Robert Bindley, a farmhand, in de If organized labor set about establishing a rule for apportioning Malone, of the Oregon Mining Con fense of himself and wife following a the profit of inventions, and improved conditions, and gave its full gress, that the state mining conven party at which beer was served. tion. which was to have been held this ••nergies to swift increase in the producing power of the individual, month, hs been changed to August 5, A FAMOUS BEACON. real progress would be quickened. i and 7. immediately following the BURNING UP LABOR. ARTHUR D. MONTEITH COMMERCIAL A R T IS T AND . I : S ÖI N E ER. | Designs Complete Industrial Plants or any j component part, mechanical or structural. Old Plants Modernized. Drafting. meeting of the governors in Boise, The Navesink Light. Near Sandy H ook Idaho. It is planned to bring the gov Is a Wonder. ernors here to the convention. •rhe moat powerful IlKbt In America Is boused on n promontory near Sandy Hook. 250 feet at>ove the beach, where It acts as a safeguard to all ships en terlng or leaving the harbor of New York. It Is called Nnveslnk light and Is of 95.000.000 candle power. At Of teen or twenty miles its hash Is as pointed and brilliant as a star. On a perfectly clear night Its shaft of light can I k * seen 100 miles at sea When it was erected It was operated at twice Its present candle power. Hut ocean pilots objected* to Its strength. Raying that so amazing an electric flash ac tually blinded them and interfered Martin's Rapids to be Harnessed. Uncle Sam heard Eugene.— Plans for the developmen with their work of 12,000 to 14.mil* horsepower at Mar Hie prayer of the pilots and turned tin's Kapids on tile McKenzie river. down his |>et lamp to 95.000.000 candle power 33 miles east of Eugene, are being The amount of oil consumed by the made by the Oregon Power company, engine that provides the power for am! surveying parties In charge of | is only on.- gallon and seven C. B. Nichols, chief engineer, will go eighths ho hour That Is the astonish to tin* rapids to make further surveys. lag thing to the unselentltli- visitor— Probably $1,000.000 will be required the i-iiniparatlvely small expense and effort repaired to maintain so great a to develop the project. light. There an* »w o fair sized dyna tnos and two oil engines. One set Is NEW COUNTIES PLANNED slwavs kept In reserve. Of course the tremendous candle power Is devel Bill to be Placed on Ballot by Initia oped tiy means of n great lens, made tive In November. in France 'The lens weighs seven Portland.— Creation of new counties tons and a halt. Is seven Inches thick and tin- consolidation of contiguous and rests in meredrv It Is revolved F A L L A C Y OF M A K IN G W O R K incorporated cities and towns by the with ease. —Kafunlay Evening Dost. Some workmen lime th«* idea that, if they refuse to work today, people of the territory directly Involv nr for six months, the work will still remain In lie done; but this is ed are provided for in a proposed gen Purely Mental. Mrs. Holden had heen blessed with entirely wrung. This iilea is carried so far by tile trades unions that eral law which will be submitted to remarkable eyesight all her life. It they believe each workman should he restricted m bis output, and the voters of this state next Novem was a great trial to her when at the Hint llic mass of workmen would In thereby benefited This fallacy ber. j age of seventy-two she was obliged to The draft of such a measure was j put on "reading glasses.'' "But thev is due to n failure In keep in mind i \cry simple truth the more we com pleted at a m eeting In Se Johns I are really becoming to yon. Aunt till produce, lln- more we have; the less we produci the less we have. !>> a special committee, consisting of da." said a gentle niece by wny of con lì T. ( 'rane, in Valve World the city attorneys of Seaside. Si solatlon. John and Cottage Grove The mem “ No. they aren't." snld Mrs. Holden, hers of the committee were \ \\ with her usual scorn for compliment. Hod made the world in six days, hut Portland is not near finished Nortdad, of Seaside; I' C Stroud. 0f “ Anybody'« eyes look better without a yet. A city is what its citizens make it. There are no speli things as St. Johns, and J. C. Johuson, of Cot glass In front of 'em. and you know It ” cities of destiny. Three men of one accord, of one mind, and of one tage Grove. "But yon couldn’t rend without them.** ventured the niece, "and you opinion, can revolutionize a city, a state, a nation; tin- trouble is to The proposed bill provides that new lo v e "- get three men of one mind Portland has now arrived at a stage that counties may be created from the ter could, too. rend without 'em.” »aid nothing can stop her growth; Imi good business administration and rllory of one or more old counties, the old lady, refusing to be soothisi. provided that the county from which ” 1 could rend most as well as ever, but the concerted actions for good of lier citizens can make her grow and territory is taken shall have remain I couldn't sense It all—that'a the only prosper so fast that in twenty ve years or less sin- will he the fourth ing an area o f not lt-ss than 500 square trouble."— Youth's Companion. city of the Nation The proper authorities should at once clean up milt's, a population of 2000 and pro and beautify that part of the city between the railroad bridge and perty of not less than 12.000,000 as Th« Deep See Lead. In order to mid a ship's position the I'nion Depot there are old dumps and eyesores there ttint were sessed valuation, and provided further that the i reposed new county shall I when approaching the land tn a fog there when Columbus lauded. These things give tin- stranger a very also h t h e same minimum as to soundings are taken with the ''det-p sea had impression Necessity will compel Portland to put elevateti "idc an-a, population and property valua- 1 lead " This lend weighs twenty eight pounds and Is nttacniHl to a line which walks in the business center within a few years. These will undoubt lions. The creation of a new county may ** it*>*rked od tn fathom» by banting of edly lie conveying sidewalks be proposed by petition of 30 per cent VHr*ous colors, pieces of leather and Bored in the base of the lead .of the legal voters residing in the ter- knots “ The duty is laid upon us to see that the pay our workmen receive ritory of which it is to be composed. Is s note about two Inches deep, and this is filled with tallow, so that the "hould not merely In- adequate f o r their necessities, hut should In gravel or shells at the bottom will ad Coot Bay on Boom. sufficient to attract the intelligence and skill o f that high-grade of here to It. and the nature of the bed Marshfield -Improvements in con American citizen, the who has made us an industrial Na nection with the lumber industries of tuny he thus asoertnlnexl When the lead 1» thrown overboard the water's tion; that the wages should not merely pay for the required service, Coos county which have been made depth Is noted on the line, and this and recently and which are now being hut should carry with them a stimulus to ingenuity and intelligent the adherence to the tallow when com- activity. F. »'. Caldwell, retiring President National Metal Trades started will aggregate In expenditure pared with the description given on approximately $ 1 , 000.1 Never he 'he chart will give the ship's position Association. fore In the history of the locality has w" n l01«“™ 61* «ccurscy Men with Elk Meat Caught. I ’endleton.— Tom W'illaby and Elmer Necliols were placed under arrest by Deputy Game Warden Averill near Hldeawuy Springs on I lie charge of killing elk. These are the first arrests for this offense ever made In Cmntilla county. The men were taken by sur prise by the deputy and in their pos session was found the elk skin and some elk meat. Business Phone East 63. U. S. LAUNDRY CO. by placing your advertisement in TH E TIMES. 180 GRAND AVE., COR. EAST Y A M H IL L , Portland, Oregon. Write for our advertising Snowy W hite Dainty Clothes Are iroy Laundered Clothes I f we could take you through our modern plant, flooded with sunshine and scrupulously dean, with its immaculately dressed workers; if we could show yoiphow thoroughly eaeli gar ment is laundered and inspectedour close atten tion to the small details that really make the laundered garment and some of the refreshing ly white, snowy clothes that leave this laundry — you would not hesitate long in sending your clothes here. -V single trial will prove a revelation in how clothes really should be laundered. A phone call will bring our wagon the same day. . E A S T 33— BOTH PHONES— B-6118. “ You Can Depend On the Troy.’ ’ Troy Laundry Co. 201 E A S T W A T E R STREET. What D oes the S a la ry B a g H old fo r Y O U ? Yes, that is a personal question, a very personal question—one that affects your whole life; and yet you would thank us for asking it if you knew what an immense power for betterment we could tie to you and your salary. T o draw a small salary month after month, year after year, is your own fault. It is pure negligence and nothing else, for there is an institution that is ever ready to enable you to rise to the highest, best paying posi tions in the profession of your choice—no matter how poor your circum stances may be, how old or how young you are, no matter where you live. And to prove this the I. C. S. points to hundreds of thousands of other men who have secured advancement and success through the I.C . S. plan; to hundreds of others in worse circumstances than you are, whose stories of advancement read like romance; to a growth from a mere idea with one Course of Instruction to one of the largest educational institu- ttons in existence with 208 Courses of Instruction, backed by a capital of six million dollars, and a total enrolment far In excess of any other col lege—a growth made possible only as the result of success in its business —and the business o f this place is to raise salaries. ' Without doubt this plan is the most practical, the quickest, easiest and cheapest way in the world for YOU to secure a better position and increased earnings. It puts you under no obligation whatever Inin-national I orrrsoondrnrr Schools to send us this coupon and allow our experts to explain our system P la a a e e a p la la . w ith o u t f a r t h e r -. -1 gatF n on f r V part, " i « ' l arivaa of Instruction, and adapt a Course <rk X to your personal needs. Ad V r l t f r A rch lte c 'I D raftsm an S h o w -C a rd \T r lt r r S tru c tu ra l En g in e e r I»o you really want to earn VI in do w T rim m e r S tru c tu ra l D raftsm an C iv il S r rv ic e Exam s C o n trac to r A B u ild e r more salary’ Would you like the O rnam ental D e sig n e r Foreman P lu m be r M echanical E nginee r C iv il E nginee r salary bag to yield you more each M echanical D rafts. P - N. C o n. E n g in e e r Foreman .M achinist S u rve yo r week or month? Then make a E le c tric a l Engineer -Mining En g in e e r E ectrlclan C h e m ist definite attempt to bring this P o w e --S ta tio n Su p t. Bookkeeper A rchitect Stenographer about by sending in this coupon. Tomorrow never comes. Do it Same . __ today. S i ' f t and N ». C ity -Stmt* H. H. Harris, Manager, 409 McKay Bldg., Portland