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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1905)
1 . THE MORNXMG OKEGONIAN, M02pAY, MABCS 20, 1905. UILD ROAD Northern Pacific Plans Possible Change. WORKING ON NORTH BANK Indications Point to Route on Washington Side. SURVEYORS ARE AT WORK Recent Sal of Columbia River and Northern, and Soundings Taken Lately Near St. Johns Give Color to Rumor. OJVU1 the Northern Pacific straighten out Its line between Portland and Mis soula, Mont., establish an easy grade, and cut off hundreds ot miles from the pres ent line? This Js the question that la being asked by the railroad men In view of the recent railroad developments In the Northwest, and the majority o those who ask the question expect an affirmative an swer. A short time ago the Columbia River & Northern Railway, running from Lyle to Goldendale. was bought by Henry P. Scott and the assumption Is that North ern Pacific money was behind the deal. The Northern Pacific people say they know nothing of the purchase, but so do those who represent the Great Northern, the other alleged purchaser, and for that reason the matter Is In doubt. But on top of the purchase by Mr. Scott, Presi dent Elliott, of the Northern Pacific, made a special visit to the Northwest, stopping at Tacoma, Seattle and Spokane, and traveling over the branch lines farther to the East. On the heels of Mr. Elliott's visit a surveying party, under Engineer Pollard, of the Northern Pacific, Is sent to- Culdesac and out over the territory between that place and Missoula, where It still Is. All these things .have made people ask for the reason of the con current visits and sales and for the cen eral activity. In explanation they hold that It is undoubtedly the Intention of the managers to build a shorter road at an early date. Wants Line on North Bank. The dream of the Northern Pacific for a route down the north bank of the Col umbia Is not a thing of the past and Is not dead. The men at the head of the company yet look to the day when there will be a bridge across the Columbia either at Vancouver or Kalama. or per haps farther up the stream. That such would be the case ultimately has been admitted time and time again by officials high In the councils of the road, though It rested In the future indefinitely. Only a few days ago a party of en gineers left St. Johns after having spent days in sounding the river above and below that place, presumably for bridge foundations and piers. The men were noncommittal but they were In the em ploy of the Northern Pacific and made extensive examination of the bottom of the Willamette. It has been stated In Portland during the past three weeks by a man promin ent In financial and business life that the Northern Pacific Intended to com mence the construction of Its north bank line Inside of IS months from this date. This" rdan Is connected closely with the plans of that company and has founda tion for what he says. Road May Be Constructed. All these circumstances lead to but one conclusion, and that Is to the construc tion of the long-promised road along the Washington side of the river and to the East. The Northern Pacific has In the past few years secured possession of the . short line from Vancouver to Kalama; It has purchased the old Portage road right of way opposite The Dalles; It has had men at work quietly buying up rights along the river until It now controls, either by purchase or promise, practi cally the entire bank between Vancouver and Lyle, and now It is rumored, and not contradicted, that it has bought the Goldendale line reaching out toward the main line at Prosser through the Yakima Valley. Surveyors Invade Country. These things are significant and so Is the present invasion of the Lewlston country by the Northern Pacific survey ors, under Mr. Pollard. The Northern Pacific officials explain this visit by the story that the right of way through that country has now lapsed, or Is about to do so, and it is necessary to resurvey "the line In order to hold a franchise which it is not desired to Jose. This tory is good as far as it goes. It Is undoubtedly true that the company does not wish to lose the right of way. and It snay be true that If It Is to be kept It is to be used. Therefore, all Indications point to con struction in a short time. It is said to bo the Intention of the company to build from Vancouver to Lyle. from which place the tracks of 'the Columbia North ern will be used to the terminal at Golden dale. Then it is to be expected that the line will be built .through Bickleton to the Northeast, and on through the Yakima Valley along a water grade to Junction with the main line at Prosser or near that place. New Tracks Will Be Built. At Dayton again, or at Pleasant View, two terminals to branch lines In Eastern Washington, new tracks will be built across country through to Lo Lo Pass in the Bitter Root Mountains to Mis soula, Mont., thus straightening out the line, giving an easier grade for the greater part of the distance and cutting oft miles of unnecessary travel. The present road from Portland to Missoula Is like a letter "S" on the map, running from this city to Tacoma, then down again to Pasco, to the northeast again to Spo kane and southeast to Missoula. The projected route will cut out all of the big bends and make practically a straight away line between the two points. This is the story circulating in railroad circles, and it seems to have foundation ' upon which to rest. If it Is so. and the rumored plans of construction axe car ried out as intended, two years from now will see Northern Pacific trains and terminal grounds In Portland handling a great business which will be tributary to the line from the rich country along the Columbia, through Eastern Washington and the State of Idaho. Area of District Is Smaller. HOOD RIVER. Or., March 19. Special) The area of the proposed Irrigation dis trict has been made much smaller by leaving out a number of the farmers who opposed the plan of bonding their property for the construction of an Irrigation sys- 'tera. The leaders of the bonding move ment are confident that their plans "will succeed and that a ditch can be con structed at a cost of (40,000. which wJU bring out water enough to Irrigate sev eral thousand acres not cultivated because no water can reach the land. Jt IS expected that the Wasco County MB Court will issue a. call for an election on the question some time next month. The members of the County Court conferred with the farmers at a meeting In the Valley last week. CHECK PUT 02T DEFICIENCIES Congress Provides Against Expendi tures In Excess of Appropriations. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, March IS. One of the wisest acts of the late Congress was the Insertion of a provision In the general deficiency bill that became a law on March 3, that here after deficiencies shall not be created ex cept upon some great emergency. Offi cers of the Government have been alto gether too free in making contracts and purchases without regard to the appro priations on hand, trusting that the de- nclencies would be supplied. When a deficiency bill amounts to the enormous figure of 531,O0,O3O, it gives the members of Congress some cause for alarm, and It seems that some method, was necessary to compel officers not to make these enormous expenditures for which no provision of Congress had been made. The creating of deficiencies was In a way unlawful, and If Congress de sired. It could repudiate these .expendi tures. But very seldom has any Just ex penditure been refused "In a deficiency bill, although sometimes criticised, DAILY CITY STATISTICS.- Deaths. lllrch 16. lilt a. 8. Weetrrlund, 32 Tears, St. Vincent's Sanitarium. Births. March 2. 1906. to the wife of A, E. Scott, a daughter. Uracil 12. 1903. to the wife- of W. C. Lsnder. 322 fourth. & boy. March IS. 1905. to the trU of -William Bls wlck. S10H Booth First street, a daughter. March 14. 1900, to the wife of Ernest Stans bery. C04 First street, a daughter. March 10, to the wife ot Joha Spadr. 602 Garfield, a boy. Contagious Disease. Em! I Ander la ill with ryelpelaa at St. Vin cent's Sanitarium. George B. Weston, measles, 915 Halght ave nue; attendant Thompson School. Building Permits. I C TV. Dent, to-etory frame rooming-house, Upshur, between Twenty-flfth and Twenty sixth. North Portland; 11000. W. H. Lee, alterations. Twenty-fourth, be tween Tillamook and Hanccck; S450. George Croeni, 114-story frame dwelling. East Twelfth, between Powell and Call; $1150. Mrs. II. Bartlett, repairs to dwelling. ast Burnslde, between Sixth and Seventh; $600. Etta Tibbots. two-story frame dwelling, East Burnslde. between Fourteenth and Fifteenth; $2250. E. O. Logan, repairs on store, Washington street, between Eleventh and Twelfth; 300. Joseph Supple, boatshop, Belmont street and Water street; $1500. G. A. Ryden. 1-story frame dwelling. East Sixth street, between Skldmore and Prescott; f 1000. Mrs. A. Semler. frame dwelling, College, be tween Sixth and Seventh; $4000. Agnes Sullivan, two-story frame store and flat. IVUllaas avenue, between Fremont and Ivy; $3200. Paul Oliver, repairs to dwelling. East Eighth, between Mason and Skldmore; $15. Charles Schmld, repairs on stores, Washing ton street. ' between Fifteenth and Sixteenth: $175. Keal Kstafo Transfers. Fred Nonenmaker to B. Bermoser, lot 17, Taylor's subdivision, section 2, township 1 south, range 2 easts 350 Amos L. Miner and wife to C Hunt ington, lots 13. 14, block 34. A. L. Miner's Addition 300 William T. Klsea to A. Eicen, lota 9. 10. 11. 13, 14. block 28. Multnomah Addition 1 Richard Derby to E. Derby, all right and title to all property of grantor wherever located 1 E. H. Parker and wife to J. Carraody. piece ot property beginning 131.8 .feet east intersection of Arthur anil water streets 5.000 Julia M. Hughes to P. P. Dabney, undivided one-half west half Thom as E. Northrop and wife D. L. C. 9,000 Julia M. Hughes, administratrix to same, undivided one-half west half Thomas E. North rp and wife D. L. C. 9.000 P. P. Dabney and wife to S. Stoller et ax, south SO acres of west one half Thomas E. Northrop and wife D. L. C. 12.000 Henrietta Froharnan and husband to J. C Dressel. about 10 acres In D. D. Prettyman'a D. Lt C 2.100 Frank Bollroan and wife to J. A. Clarke, lots 21 to 24. Inclusive, block 7. Stanley Addition. No. 2 170 AUce Englert to N. E. Saaford. lots 1. 2, 3. 11. block 2, Wheatland Addi tion No. 2 1 Charles Langdon. to W. A. Rldegout, ioi lo. oiock iv. mgniana .rarKj excepting north 1214 feet 1 Sebastian Ply-male and wife to F. J. Perkins, lots 5. 10. 17. 19 to 22. , Inclusive, block 1. Cloverdale Tract. 1.750 Kittle B. Gray and husband to W. F. Steadelman. lots 10. 11. Gray tract. 260 J. E. Scott and wife to Salem Flour ing Mills Company. lot lo, block 1, lot 15. block 4. lot 2. block 5. lot 7, block 6. City View Park Addition.. 100 Robert H. Blgham and wife to ". G. Newlands. lot 14. and 12 feet oil north side of vacated alley adjoining said lot 3,250 Aloys Harold to E. D. Martinson, lots 19 to 24. inclusive, block 4, Boston Addition 10 L. H. Tarpley and wife to H. E. Joy. lots 18, 19. block 2. Lochia var Addition 10 Daniel MeUger et al.. to F. Es cober, lot 19. block 2, Metzger Ad dition to Gresham 225 O. M. Smith andwlfe to U E. Chlpman. 10 sores, section 7. town ship 1 south, range 3 east 700 Laura Breske and husband to T. O. Sands, west 10 feet lots 1, r block 24. Alblna C.000 Real Estate Investment Association 'to J. Votller. lot 10. Nock 43. Sell wood 200 J. C. Wlndlc. trustee, to A. Thurlay. lots 2. 3. block 14. James Johns Ad dition to St. Johns 1.300 Sheriff to S. J. Henderson, trustee, sundry lots In Mabelle Park and other property 1,100 Amos M. Roberts and wife to W. Gat ton, 78.74 acres, James Loomls D. U C 1 George W. Bates and wife to E. Goldsmith lots 2. 3. block 139. Couch Addition J3.500 Erik Wlk and wife to J. C. Hannelgh. lot 18. block 34, Multnomah 1.000 Investment Mortgage Company to E. ToDken et al. lot 5. east one-half lot 8. Murhard tract 1.700 Clara. Fechheimer et al to Western American Company, undivided one half lots 1. 2. block 85, Raleigh Addition (. 1 Machine Shop at the Locks. m HOOD RIVER. Or., ilarch IS. (Special.) W. La Clark, engineer in charge of the Government works at Cascade Locks, who was In the city today, says that the $30,000 recently granted by Congress for tho locks at the Cascades will be used In the construction ot a machine shop. houses for employes and for grading and improving the grounds. A gravel bar. which has formed at the lower entrance to the canal, will be dredged after the high water tWs Spring. Product of Salmon Hatcheries. KALAMA. Wash., March 19. (Special.) The Kalama River Salmon Hatchery turned out about 3.000,000 young salmon last week. This represented the take ot eggs from three hatcheries: wind River, Chinook and Kalama, for 1904, the eggs taken from the Wind River and Chinook having been brought to Kalama when In the "eye" for hatching. A year ago the Kalama hatchery alone turned out over 6,500.000. Corner-Stone of City Hall Laid. ABERDEEN. Wash.. March 19. (Spe cial.) The corner-stone of the new City Hall was laid this afternoon with appropriate ceremonies. The hall, which is to be completed by September 1 next. will cost 430,000. A Safe Cough Medicine for Children. In buying a cough medicine for children never be afraid to buy Chamberlain's Couch Remedy. There is no dancer from it and relief la always -sure to follow. It is especially valuable tor colds, croup and whooping cougn. Jtor eaie oy am orux MAY LIVE OR DIE Fate of Central Committees Is in Doubt. FUNCTIONS ARE LESSENED New Direct Primary Law Takes Away "Greater Part of Committee Work May Force Election, of New Committeemen. Are the present central committees In jjils county. Republican and Demo cratic, to be created anew in the pri maries May 6? Have they heen abol ished by enactment of the direct pri mary law? Are they to cbntlnue exist ence until next year's primaries for the county election and meanwhile are their functions In the city to bo assumed by separate city committees, chosen at the next primaries? Or are no new com mittees to be chosen this year? Each of the 58 city precincts has one A ItESFECTED CITIZEN" DOUGLAS COUNTY. OF 8. M. Walte, S. M. Walte, a respected resident of Roseburg, Or., for a Quarter of a century, died there last Monday morning at the home of his son, F. B. Walte, where he had resided since the death of his wife last September. The dead man was S2 years of age and a native of Ohio. In 1873 he moved from Michigan to Oregon, and ever since had lived on his' farm on Round Prairie. He was a good neighbor and useful citizen and had a large number of friends who held him In the high est esteem. Mr. Walte left a family of eight children: F. B. Walte, one of Southern Oregon's leading business men; J. B. Walte. a Southern Pacific Railroad engi neer; Ex-County School Superinten dent Douglas Walte; C. M. and T. C Walte and Mrs. Ed Cooper, all of Douglas County; Mrs. E. H. Coleman, of Forest Grove, and Mrs. William Bush, of Portland. member on each city central and county central committee. According to City Auditor Devlin's Interpretation of the direct primary law all those precincts will elect new committeemen. May Be Restrained by Court. And Mr. Devlin will receive petitions from candidates for places on the com mittees the same as from candidates for party nominations, unless re strained by court mandate, and this seems quite unlikely In view of the Cir cuit Court's application of the law to the coming city primaries. Each candidate for a place on a cen tral committee must secure on his peti tion signatures of 2 per cent of the vote cast in bis precinct for his party nominee for Representative In Con gress last June. The number of signa tures required will range from one to seven, according to the vote cast. The aspirant who shall receive the most votes In his precinct from hla party will represent his precinct on tho cen tral committee for the next two years. Will Be Chosen Next Year. This means that the precinct com mitteemen for the 25 county precincts outside Portland will not be chosen un til next year and that all ot the com mittee will not be elected at one time. The direct primary law Is somewhat ambiguous as to the make-up and du ties of the central committees, but the opinion is widespread that new precinct committeemen for the city must be chosen May C, who will supersede the city committeemen chosen by the Re publican and Democratic conventions last Spring. Some authorities go so far as to de pose and say that the central commit tees then chosen are dead so far as the law is concerned, because they were created under the primary law of isol, wnich was expressly repealed by the enactment of the direct prixnarr law at the polls last June. Committees to Be Reorganized. Anyhow, the committees seem In fair way to be reorganized after the next primaries. Thus a heavy stroke will be delivered onl the dominant nnl- Itlcal organizations of this county. The blow will fall hardest on the Repub lican organization, which had hoped to perpetuate Its central committee un til next year. By that time its leading spirits hoped that the direct primary "vagary," as they call it. would have worked Itself out and brought Itself Into popular discredit, thereby opening a way for return to old-time "sane" conditions. The Republican Central Committee Is now headed by Whitney L. Boise, its chairman, and the Democratic by John Tan Zantc. It would seem that the tenure of both will end after the coming pri maries In the reorganization of those committees. "But what is a central committee worth, anyhow?" as,k the old-time machine men. "when there are to be no conventions and the committee is not to name delegates V That used to be the chief function of central committees: now thov are to be left only the duty of managing party campaigns and of filling vacancies on party tickets a rather prosy Job In view of tho lively functions they have hereto fore enjoyed. VBut." pay the deposed leaders, "what will there be to manage and who will care anything about It?" Considered a Triumph. The wresting away of the Republican Central Committee from, the ruling or ganization In Multnomah County is con sidered a mighty triumph by the antl- machlne element, and they now think they are making Inroads Into the very citadel ot the organization. At the "new deal" meeting last Friday night one of the patriots declared that the real pur pose of the new movement waa to capture the Central Committee from the Mitch ell-Matthews-Carey people. The Republican Central Committee, as created by the last Republican County Convention, was selected of men who would be sure to hold the power in the ' 'o rganlza tl o n.' ' They were tried and true and were slated from headquarters. As. tho preceding Central Committee had been one of the chief instruments where by the machine had continued its reign, tho new committee was- expected to per form the same function In future the se lection of a regular primary ticket of dele gates to the County Convention. The committee styled itself the City and County Central Committee a. title where by it expected to malntnln Its sway for the city convention tMq year. But there is to be no city convention; hence the managers of the committee are rather glum. Number of Signatures Necessary. To secure places on the primary ballot ot Republican and Democratic candidates for seats on central committees aspirants must secure signatures to their primary petitions to tho number indicated by tho following table, based on 2 per cent of the vote cast by each party last June for Representative in Congress: Democrat. Republican. Signa- Slgna Votes tures. Votes tures Precinct cast.needed. cast-needed. 1 35 1 1U 3 2 : 70 2 254 6 3 45 1 119 3 4 65 2 151 4 5 SS 2 ITS 4 6 97 2 163 4 7 50 1 250 5 8 S3 2 209 5 9 S3 2 1G3 4 10 53 2 14S 3 11 47 1 133 3 12 S3 2 193 4 13 .'. 30 1 ITS 4 14 5S 2 165 4 15 :.. .52 3 133 3 1G 47 1 214 5 17 50 1 205 . 5 18 7S 2 143 3 19 43 1 193 4 20 23 1 S3 2 21 6S 2 205 5 22 14 1 56 2 23 S7 -2 22S 5 24 49 1 135 3 25 43 1 140 3 28 T ........... 2S 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 29 ...... SS 43 66 10 67 73 50 32 43 19 33 S3 41 43 33 91 70 74 79 103 3 2 161 4 1 178 4 2" 173 3 1 63 2 2 131 4 2 - 109 3 1 TS 2 1 96 2 1 12S 3 1 103 3 1 1SS 4 2 224 5 1 , 134 3 1 160 4 1 141 3 2 1S3 4 2 314 7 2 218 5 2 193 4 2 238 5 3 334 7 2 1S6 4 2 183 4 0 77 2 2 162 4 2 237 5 2 235 6' 2 213 5 2 215 5 2 173 3 1 S3 2 1 104 3 9766 35 37 33 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 ..110 .. 78 .. 5S .. 74' .. 78 .. 62 .. 68 .. 60 4S 49 50 ... 51 52 53 54 55 56 .. 65 .. 30 .. 23 57 58 Totals K3S Aberdeen Takes Hold of Exhibit. ABERDEEN, Wash., March 19. (Spe cial.) Chehalls County will probably be one of the few In the state that will not make an exhibit at the Lewis and Clark Fair, the County Commis sioners expressing their opposition to It. The members of the Chamber of Commerce of this city are circulating a petition In various towns requesting the county to appropriate at least 33000 towards mailing an exhibit. The towps will make private contributions if the county will take the initiative. Near the Junction of Snake and' Columbia Rivers, In Walla Walla County, Wash. 5, B. 3C. Darrf, Pendleton. Or. T. A. nafaea. The Dalles, Or. N Seeley Ce, Luxon biilldlnff, Tacoma. "Wash. Serefer FbAer, 41-42 Jameson block; Spokane, Wasa. GRAFTING GOES ON Men Who Draw Government Money for Nothing. BRAZEN ATTEMPT OF HOUSE Voted Mileage for Traveling Not Done, but Senate Blocked Scheme St. Louis and Panama Ca nal Commission Grafts. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, March . 19. Notwithstanding the vigorous manner in which the Pres ident Is assailing corruption in the Gov ernment service, and In face of the popular clamor for honest administra tion, the spirit of graft still pervades certain Government circles, an.3 jrraft In one form or another continues to thrive. With tho country worked up to a high pltoh, with new exposures being made every day and many con victions resulting, it is surprising that any public servant should have the nerve to persist In his quest for graft. But not all those with grafting In clinations are succeeding. The most gigantic attempt at graft, the most brazen attempt to bleed the Govern ment, wa3 the action, of the House of Representatives, at the recent session In -voting itself 3190,000 in extra mil eage that was neither earned nor de served. The ' passage by the House of the extra mileage bill was as bold a stroke as has been made In Congress In -many years, and members who voted for that measure will have much to answer for it when they return to their constituents. Great Mileage Graft. The House, by a majority vote, passed a bill giving all its members mileage for the special session, which met just prior to the- regular session a year ago. The two sessions were merged Into one. No Senator or Representative went home after the one session to return to tho next; it was a physical impos sibility, for one session ended at noon on the first Monday in Decembar and the next session convened at that same minute. Members ot the Fifty-eighth Congress made but two trips from their homes to Washington and return, and they were allowed mileage at a liberal rate for both those trips. To have voted themselves additional mileage would have been to dip their hands Into the Treasury, simply because they had the power, and to have virtually stolen Just so much money. In tho, case of Pacific-coast members, it would have meant some two or three thousand dollars In graft, for it was graft, pure and simple. The extra mileage bill would never have passed the House bad It been known In advance that the steal would have been turned down by the Senate, for the vote of the House availed noth ing, and merely branded the men who supported the bill as so many would be grafters. The House believed the Senate would "stand in," but the House made a serious miscalculation, and the mileage graft fell through. St. Louis Commission Graft. But there have been other attempts at legalizing graft. When Congress made an appropriation for the St. Louis exposition, it authorized a commission of nine members, who have been draw ing salaries of $5000 a year each from the passage of the bill rour years ago to the present day, and will continue to draw salaries at this rate until June 30. This commission was an utterly ORCHARD LANDS AT TWO Watered by the Snake River Irrigation Co.'s Immense Power Plant 4 Choicest lands in the Northwest. Warm, sandy soil, with southerly slope, insures the earliest crops of any place north of Los Angeles. Snake River furnishes the water supply, which is unfailing. .... Two transcontinental railroads afford quick and easy access to all the markets of the Pacific Coast, the Orient and the East. and 20-Acre Tracts Offered at $60 to $100 Per Acre Strawberries grown in this neighborhood last year were on the market two weeks before any others in the Northwest, and in some instances netted the grower nearly $700 per acre. Can you afford to overlook this oppor tunity? Prepare your ground and raise a crop this year. An investment in these lands means a handsome income for life. To induce set SEE OUR AGENTS AND ARRANGE FOR TRANSPORTATION EXCURSION RATES MADE FROM ALL RAILROAD POINTS TO TWO RIVERS' B. S. JACKSON, Gea'I Sales Aeat, 246 Stark Street, Pertlaad, Or. useless body; It waa created to afford places for a bunch of defeated Sen ators and Representatives, and as such it was a success. But there was no need ot this commission; it did not ad vance the interests of the exposition a bit; it has rendered no practical service; it has done nothing but put in appear ance on stae occasions, look pretty and draw the fat salaries. Thla com mission was as useless as the fifth wheel to a wagon. Notwithstanding the uselessness ot the commission, one of Its members was re cently returned to the Senate and Imme diately had his place filled by a man from his state, who will draw salary at the rate of "SOW, a year until June 30. though he will not be called upon to do a stroke of work In the meantime. This Is graft, pure and simple. During the recent session of Congress the Jamestown Exposition made an effort to pass a bill creating a like commission for it3 exposition, providing for seven commissioners, to draw $5000 a year from now until the Winter of 1S07. But Speaker Cannon had seen the graft In the St. Louis Exposition, and he promptly put his foot down on the Jamestown graft, and thl3 little scheme was cut off. Jamestown was given a commission hut it is made up of three Cabinet officers, who will not draw pay. It Is not the kind ot a com mission the politicians wanted, for It of fered no opportunity for graft. Canal Commission's Graft. Then, there Is the more recent example of the Panama Canal Commission, men on large salaries, with an extra large allow ance Xor expenses, who had the nerve to draw additional compensation when acting as directors of the Panama Railroad, a part of the duty they were appointed to perform. True, these, extra allowances were small, but they were graft, none the less, and It Is graft that has been sanc tioned. With the spirit of graft pervading the higher circles. It is not surprising that underlings should attempt to follow the example of their superiors, but It Is the underlings that suffer. The clerk who makes J50 or 3100 out of some contract that passes through -his, hands, the indi vidual who defrauds the Government out of 3100 worth of land, is made to pay the penalty, while the men higher up, who successfully work a graft that is "worth while," go untouched. President's Influence Felt. But the stand of the administration is having Its effect. Had It not been for the position of the President, and the re sulting public sentiment, there Is little doubt that the mileage graft would have passed the Senate as well as the House. Had it not been for this same sentiment, the Jamestown commission graft would have been approved by Congress. Had it not been for the President's stand, the various Junkets of Congressional commit tees would have been made at Govern ment expense. Instead of at the expense of the men participating. There Is a spirit of reform mingling with the spirit of graft, and gradually overpowering It, but tho reform is slow of accomplishment. Was Not Gambling. - PORTLAND, March 19. (To the Editor.) In your issue for the 15th Inst, appears a statement that I was found In a sambllng house and arrested on a charge of having lottery tickets In ray possession. Will you kindly allow me to say that the room where I was found not a gambling-room, but the private apartment of some Chinese. I was there looking. after some of the pupils who attend the night school, ot which I am a member. I had no lottery tickets on my person or In my possession, nor was any one gambling In that room. As soon as the facts were m&de known I was at once set at liberty, and no charge was found against me. May I add that as & helper In the night school of the Presby terian Mission It is one of my duties to look, after popils, and this duty takes me Into the lodging rooms where so many ot them lire, but I have nothing to do with gambling nor have I gambled since becom ing a Christian- DR. SINGLETON. Are unlike all other pills. No purging or pain. Act specially on the liver and bile. Carter's Little Liver Pills. One pill a dose. RIVERS tlement we are offering a limited number of acres at these low prices and upon easy terms. At the opening of the Clarkston district similar lands sold at $250 per acre, and now are rated at from $1000 to $1500 per acre. At Kennewick lands which sold two years ago for $40 per acre now command $400 and upwards. Kennewick is an object lesson. Beyer A Henrc, 10 N. Secpnd street. Walla "Walla. Wash. ' Jekm A. Jj7hh, Colfax, Wash- J. H. EXttcII, Vancouver;. Wash., J. T. Grteer, Chehalls, "Wash. FrMt & Bryaat, Moro, Or. - C . FarreTT fc Co., Eujane, Or. E. Z. Fergus Astoria, Or. ' ' J. A. Mexke, Oregon City. Or. r THE PILLS THAT THE POPE'S PHYSICIAN ENDORSES Promote Deytlopmant of Girls to Healthy Womanhood. "I certify that I have used Dr. Williams' Pink PlWs In four oases of the simple anaemia of development. After a few weeks of treatment, the reeult came fully up to my esqoecta tlons. For that reason I shall not fall In the future to extend the use of this laudable pre paration, not only In the treat ment of other forma of the category of anaemia or chlo rosis, but also In cases of neurasthenia and the like,' (Sloned)GIUSEPPI LAPPONI. Via del Gracchi, 382, Rome. Dr.Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People SOLD ST ALL ORUOCI8TS. A cup of Ghi rardelli s Ground Chocolate in the morning is the most appetiz ing, wholesome, comforting breakfast any one can take. Always fresh in patented hermeti cally sealed cans- I I nCDIIITlTCn MER AND werejewn. ULDILI I Al LU WOMEN atedbytte maBHiaB Treat Eaia. California Dtmiasa Bitters. Nim't r-v-t- -wonderfal sphrcdisi&c Send for Circular. De pot. 823 Market Sc. S. F. AO drngiits eH it IMMEDIATELY OPPOSITE THE FAMOUS KENNEWICK DISTRICT From