8.,i; WEST SHORE. Those who mourn the decadence of the " Oregon style" of journalism that kept things warm in the days of Bush and Dreyer, should read the mutually complimentary screeds of such social, literary and po litical lights as Theodore Roosevelt, in the New York itr 1 1 ).! ,SVn, and Frank Ilatton, in the wasnmgum im P PORTLAND'S COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS. RESIDENT Harrison has appointed Hon. R. p, Earhart, of Portland, to the position of collector of customs for this port. In doing this he has selected one of the most popular, able and ex- Sun. and Frank nation, in we """uu6"u xl , , , I ' ' . , ...... x... i(,MM,si. ner enced gentlemen among the leaders of the renub. True, these X3 degenerate unius, uui rc - r - , . lly ncouragcl by lb, like toe of the old vigor lican party m Oaf. Mr. Earhar has served M, , . v party and state faithfully in several capacities, and of journalism. F . , L e n V i. .1 J enjoys the respect of all honorable men of both par- A mistake must have been made by the Washing- ties. Mr. Earhart is a native of Franklin Ohio, ton club which refused to entertain Pugilist Sullivan where he was born June 23, 1837, and came to Oregon on the ground that he is not a gentleman. We now in 1855. From 18G6 to 1889 he has been continuously o rvn capacity, the most import-, ant of which were special U. S. Indian agent at the Warm Springs reservation, in 1866-7; representative of Marion county in the legis lature, in 1870; in the U. S. surveying service from 1874 to 1878 ; secretary of state of Oregon eight years; adjutant general from 1885 to 1887; and representative from Multnomah county in the legislature of 1889. Mr. Earhart is at present man ager of the Northwest Fire & Marine Insuranco Co. havo Mr. Sullivan's own word for it that he is a gen tleman, and this is a state ment from the highest au thority, though not couched in diplomatic language. He has paid his lino in Miss issippi, refuses to light the " nigger," and says he is going on the stage. Just what he will do there is not perfectly clear, since mechanical appliances have rendered tho scenery easily handled by smaller men. Portland has a custom sanctioned by long neglect to enforce the ordinance pro hibiting it, that ought to be relegated to tho place where her other village peculiari ties have gone. It is ab surd to say it is impracti cable to hitch horses when they arc left unattended in tho streets. Other cities of ten times tho sizo of Port land enforce this ordinance, . . V I H ; . v" - V' St . a :" s HON. K, 1. BARIUKT. The purchase of the Fair haven & Southern by the Great Northern company, settles a matter ' that has been in perplexing doubt. The excellence of Belling ham bay as a harbor, and the lowness of the pass across the mountains have long been deemed as cer- and it can he done here just as easily. In those pla- tain to induce some mt transcontinental line to bc- ccs the police drive every unsecured horse to the sta- lect that harbor for a terminal point, which this great w . . . .. 11 nun, nuciv wiu uwiii-i iiuiHi gu aim pay ior ns redemp tion. It would take but a few weeks of this kind of treatment to create a change of opinion as to the com parative practicability of tying a horse or paying five dollars for not doing so. When Portland was a little village, horses could run down the streets and do but little damage, save to frighten chickens and furnish a sadly-needed item for the local paper; but now that sho is no longer a village she should put village cus toms behind her and emulate the example of some uf the larger and more progressive communities, Manitoba system has now done. The crowth and do - tj velopment of Bellingham bay will now be much more rapid than it has ever been. Wanamaker & Brown's new government guernseys did not suit the a-sthetic taste of the life-saving crew at Cleveland, Ohio, and they refused to wear them. This disrespect to the clothing and postal department of the government was promptly punished by the dis missal of the offenders, and the administration has again been vindicated.