THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTIiASnD, AUGUST 13, 1905. WHY PAVE PORTLAND STREETS FULL WIDTH In Residence Districts Only Two-Thirds of the Road way Is Used for Traffic. 38 . -SSSSZ TA Ira fl w ritrv A. . miJmiw i a pavement of 30 feet, -which hereto fore has been considered as the mini mum width. Third There can be no question that greensward -without Us accom paniment of dust Is more healthful for a community than a pavement. Fourth The wider boulevard affords more soli, more air. and more wafr to tne roots of the treets'ln the boule vard, thus Increasing their growth ar.i beauty. Fifth The water mains, gas ma'.rs and wire conduits are In the boule vard, rather than under the .paving, consequently the paving once down, need never again be disturbed. Sixth The narrow paving presents less surface for the accumulation cf dirt and dust, which, blown about. In jures furniture, clothing and carpets, to say nothing of the tfeleterlous ef fect upon the exterior of residences. Many Portland people have been agitating the question of- narrower streets, and It Is hoped to bring tho matter more prominently before tho entire city In a short time. There la gome talk of asking tho City Coun-ll to allow property-holders to Improve their property In this manner, where a reach of at least a block can be so changed, with the Idea of demonstrat ing the benefit and advantage of tho scheme. If the plan Is carried out ar.d universally adopted. Portland will bo come not only a city of roses, but oC parks and beautiful drives throughout. WHAT is tho use of paving BO feet of street when only IS or 20 feet are used for traffic? What is the uso. of paying twice as much to im prove a streot as Is necessary, when it could be done so much better in another way? "Why not make a pork of every street in the residence district, a grove of trees, the roots of which do not upend the sidewalks? "Why not double tho lawn area and make the city truly a thing of beauty such as could not be found In any other part of tho world? Those are tho questions many Portland people are trying to solve. Twonty-slx feet of pavement from curb to curb In the residence districts, IS feet of boulevard, green with grass and gemmed with flowers and trees, six feet of sidewalk to divide tho lawns from' the thoroughfare, no dust, no dirt, and thou sands of dollars less expense; one mag nificent reach of homes and handsome avenues, whoro now crawl and struggle myriad stretches of dusty depositories of cobblestones and dust in Summer, and cobblestones and mud in ."Winter; the change from the old to the - new. How would tho citizens of Portland like it, and what would the visitors and home seekers think of It if "the dream came to pass? Portland may be a city of roses,, .and. .it is pre-eminently so, but no less trufe Is It & city of streets, and unpaved ones -at that, whose Improvement In the future will call forth a million of dollars from the pockots of tho owners of homes. If much can be added to. the beauty, the healthfulncss and the cleanliness of theso streets, and much can be subtracted from the expense of their renovation, will not the Portland people and tho city govern ment follow the experience and the ad vice of other cities and learn the lesson of narrow pavements In residence dis tricts and make a garden of tho town? Many aro hoping and working that such will be the case. Oimj of the first things remarked by the traveler who has seen tho world and has at last come to the best In a visit here, Is the smallness of the blocks and the number of the streets, and Incident ally, perhaps, the absence of pavement except in tho downtown districts. And after they have noticed they will sit Jn the evening and tell of other cities where streets are bowers and things of beauty, and the homes are set In groves and surrounded- by vistas of lawn and flowers. And'as they talk they will tell of what has been done In Rochester, New York, Cleveland, O., "Winnipeg, Detroit, Buf falo, Toronto, Toledo. Columbus, Minne apolis and innumerable places across the 6eas where the new plan has been tried and the old has been forgotten. Our forefathers, when they planned the cities, forgot or did not know the expense of paving, the difficulty of keeping In re pair a roadway 50 or 60 feet from curb to curb; they did not take Into account the electric wires, the mains for gas and water, the conduits for electricity and all the other Incidentals of advancing civili zation. They thought only of how much space It took to turn a hayrack or of outside land to picket their family cow. That time, however, pleasant as It was, has passed, and the utilitarian demands of an increasing and congested population force tho property-holder to look askance at tho acres and acres of unuped public highways before ho gazes fearfully Into tho vacuum of the street Improvement fund. Theso changes then have brought about desire for narrower streets throughout the country, and It is safe to eay, the world, until In many places the problem is being solved not only for economy but for beau ty and lack of dirt as well. Minneapolis not long since began to try the experiment, and Is pleased with the result. In that city the average width of the streets is CO feet, and in many of the residence districts tho plan has been adopted of filling that space with from 38 to 86 feet of pavement, about 18 feet of boulevard bordering the curbs and side walks of approximately four feet In width. ThiB change has made a noticeable dif ference in the beauty of the districts im proved and has met with the approbation of all. ,..The question of cost was calculated well .before tho change was made, and it was discovered that the amount saved by pav ing 24 feet Instead of 30 feet wide, assum ing paving, curb and gutter' to cost $2 per square yard, is $7040 per mile. Every W7TH3GFOOT L. i'" rSmtnA imkmmm lit iffrrMwim 4 T W777fZGFET foot that the paving is narrowed saves $1173 per mile, and to each owner of a 50-foot lot $5.07. If the paving Is 24 feet Instead of 30 feet, the 50-foot lot owner saves $30.42. In the Eighth "Ward there are 67 miles of streets. By paving streets of that ward 24 feet between curbs Instead of 30, $471,S0 Is saved. The Thirteenth "Ward has 123 miles of streets, and the saving here would be $S55,920, or a total in these two wards of Ji. 237.000. The difference between tne paved sur face of the Eighth and Thirteenth "Wards by making a paved roadway 24 feet wide instead of SO feet wide amounts to about 140 acres. Think for a moment of the unwisdom of paving 140 acres more than aro needed in these two wards. The advantages argued in behalf of the narrow Improved roadway are many, a fow of them being: First The original cost Is lessened. Second A sprinkling cart can cover a 24-foot pavement with one passage over it, whereas if tho pavement Is 30 feet or wider. It is necessary to go over the same block twice, thus doubling the cost of street-sprinkling. If tho street Is kept clean by sweeping, 21 feet will present one-flfth less surface than Success Is Simply a Matter of Mental Attitude, Says Elbert Hubbard Chicago Inter Ocean. THE world Is full of good things. Herbert Spencer says most of the sunshine goes to waste the whole out-of-doors is charged with oxygen It Is yours. .Human hearts are full of love and ten derness and sympathy hold the right mental attitude and you have the key that unlocks them all. "We are afloat on the ocean of Good Will let down your buckets. Of material good things there are enough to go around; like the loaves and the fishes, even the fragments will feed a multitude. Distribution is not Just the best always, but get free, and all these things will be added unto you. The man who writes these lines Is 50 years of age. and has never been sick a day never missed a meal through Indis position, never consulted a physician. Ho has made fortunes for himself and for tunes for a dozen others. Three men are millionaires by following one of his Ideas clOBely and religiously. It Is Just a matter of mental attitude! A6 for the money, though, all you want It for, bcj'ond arf small amount, is to know its worthlessness, Just as jou should have a college education In order that you may know there Is nothing In 1L Yet the ex perience Is good that Is It, the experience! We want to live, to live fully and freely, to have life, and life in abundance. If the writer of these lines should die tonight, his last words would bo those of thankfulness to his Maker for the priv ilege of having lived worsted, tolled, sinned, suffered, endured, enjoyed lived! There is no damnation for anyone there never was, and never will be and there is no aereat excepting for those who think defeat. Success Is for you. Life is good! Success is in the blood. There are men whom Fate can never keep down they march Jauntily forward, and take by divine, right the best of ev erything that earth affords. But their success Is not attained by the Dr. Samuel Smiles-Connecticut policy. They do not Ho In wait, nor scheme, nor fawn, nor seek to adapt their sails to catch the breeze of popular favor. Still, they are ever alert and alive to any good that may come their way, and when It comes they simply appropriate It, and, tarrying not, movo steadily forward. X5ood health! Whenever you go out ot doors, draw the chin In, carry the crown of your head high, and fill the lungs to the utmost: drink in the sunshine; greet your friends with a smile, and put soul into every handclasp. Do not fear being misunderstood, and never waste a minute thinking about your enemies. Try to fix nrmly in 3'our own mind what you would like to do, and then, without violence of direction, you will movo straight to the goal. Fear Is the rock on which we split, and hate is the shoal on which many a bark Is stranded. When we are fearful, the Judgment Is as unreliable as the compass of a ship whose hold Is full of Iron ore; Shen we hate we have unshipped the rud er; and if we stop to meditate on what the gossips say we have allowed a hawser to befoul the screw. Xeep your mind on the great and splen did thing you would like to do, and then, as the days go gliding by, you will And yourself unconsciously seizing upon the opportunities that are required Xof the ful fillment of your desire. Just as tho coral Insect takes from the running tide the ele ments that it needs. Picture In jour mind tho able, earnest, useful person you de sire to be, and the thought you hold is hourly transforming you into that particu lar Individual. Thought is supreme, and to think Is often better than to do. Preserve a right mental attitude the at titude of x courage, frankness and good cheer. To think rightly is to create. Darwin and Spencer have told us that this Is the method of creation. Each animal has evolved the parts it needed and desired. The horse is fleet because it wishes to be; the bird flies because it desires to; the duck has web feet because It wants to swim. All things come through desire, and every sincere prayer Is answered. We become like that on which our hearts are fixed. Many people know this, but they do not believe it thoroughly enough so that it shapes their lives. "Wo want friends, so we scheme and chase 'cross lots after strong people, and He in wait for good folks or alleged good folks hoping to attach ourselves to them. The only way to secure friends Is to be one. And before you are fit for friendship you must be able to do without It. That Is to say, you must havo sufficient self-reliance to take care of yourself, and then bu't of the surplus of your energy you can do for others. The man who craves friendship, and yet desires a self-centered spirit more, will never lack for friends. If you would have friends, cultivate solitude Instead of society. Drink in the ozone; bathe in the sunshine, and out in the silent night, under the stars, say to j-ourself again and yet again, "I am a part of all my eyes behold!" And tho feeling will surely come to you that you are no Interloper between earth and sky, but that you are a necessary particle of the whole. Xo harm can come to you that does not come to all, and If you shall go down it can only be amid a wreck of worlds. Thus, by laying hold of tho forces of the -universe, you aro strong with them. And when you realize this, all else Is easy, for In your arteries course red cor puscles, and In your heart there is the will to do and be. Carry your chin In and tho crown of your head high. "We are gods In the chrysalis. Success Is a result of a mental attitude, and the right mental attitude will bring success la everything you undertake. In fact,, tbero Is no such thing as fail ure, excepting to those who accept and bellevo In failure. Failure! There Is no such word in all the bright lexicon of speech unless you yourself have written It there. A. great success, as I have said many times and as I like to repeat Is made up of an aggregation of little ones. These finally form a whole. Tho man who fills a position of great honor and great trust has first filled many smaller positions of trust. The man who has the superintendence of 10,000 men say Mr. James J. Hill has had the charge' of many small squads. And before he had charge of a small squad he had charge of himself. When he was a baggageman he had charge of the baggage, and he did his work so faithfully, so efficiently, so well Qp, jig that It was very soon discovered that ho needed no superintendent. a The man who does his work so well that he needs no supervision has already succeeded. And the acknowledgment of his success Is sure to follow In the form of a promotion. And even If promotion should not follow speedily, the man has gained power grown In personality. He Is more to himself more to God. The world wants Its work done, and civllza tlon Is simply a constant search for men who can do things. Success Is the most natural thing In the world. The man who does not suc ceed has placed himself In opposition to the laws of the universe. The world needs you It wants what you produce you can serve it, and If you will. It will reward you richly. By doing your work you are moving in tho -ne of least resistance It Is a form of self-protection. You need what others have to give they need you. To reciprocate is wisdom. To rebel Is folly. To consume and not produce Is a grave mistake, and upon such a one Nature will visit her displeasure. The common idea Is that success means great sacrifice, and that you must buy It with a price. In one sense this is true. To succeed you must choose. If you want this you- cannot have that. Suc cess demands concentration oneness of aim and desire. Choose this day whom you will server Paradoxically It la true that you must "sacrifice" some things to gain others. If you are a young man and wish to succeed In business you wlll havo to sacrifice the cigarettes, tho late hours, the dice, the cards and all that round of genteel folly which saps your strength and tends to unfit you for your work tomorrow. That awkward and uncouth country boy who went to work yesterday Is concen trating on his tasks he Is doing tho thing, high or law, mental or what-not-yes! He is not so very clever, his trou sers bag at the knee, and his sleeves are too short, but bis heart has but one de sire to do his work. And let me say right here that the habit of continually looking out for Num ber One Is absolutely fatal to success. Nature Is on her guard against such, and If by accident they get Into a posi tion of power their leaso on the place is short. A great success demands a certain ab negation a certain disinterestedness. The man who can lose himself In his work Is the man who will succeed best. Courtesy, kindness and concentration this trinity forms the sesame that will unlock all doors. Good cheer Is the direct concomitant of good health. Isn't it a part of wis dom not to put an enemy In your mouth to steal away your brains? Isn't It bet ter not to know you havo a stomach, and to bo fill your working hours that tho night comes as a blessing and a' bene diction a time for sweet rest and. dreams? These things means a preparation for good work. And good work means a preparation for higher work. Succesg Is easy. You do not ascend the mountain by standing In the valley and Jumping over it. Success Is only difficult to the man who Is trying to lift himself by tugging at his boot straps. How Best to Become an Actress THE latest advice to bo offered to the aspiring and confident young woman who believes herself among the chosen, comes from George Alex ander, the English actor, by -way of the Theater, and Is very much to tho point. Says he: "Don't unless you can rough it! "Don't unless you can wait! "Don't unless you can cat your heart. . "Don't unless you can weep and win! "Save you can accept as your por tion of df3appolntment. delay, weari ness, travel and travail, opposition, malice, neglect and heartache, and tho thousand natural shocks this stago flesh Is heir to why, I would din It Into you. Don't! If you can and will then, here's luck to you! "If you would be an actor, study Na ture! .Learn to hold up the" mirror that Is tho whole duty of acting. Study her In the street, In the drawlng-rocm. In the assembly; get at her secrets and her manifestations of them; learn to demonstrate them, to reproduce, re peat them; go Into the solitude and meditate them, practice her expression, remember her accent, make her live in you again! Perfect the machinery learn her myriad ways of "walking, of talking, of being, and of doing! Let nothing seem too trivial, nor too hard! "The greatest artist and the closest to Nature, was Shakespeare. Steep yourself In Shakespeare, gain acquain tance with his men and his women. Conceive them afresh glvo them a new being! Walk apart and voice them, and gesture them, and act them to yourself! He touched the noblest and the meanest; and In him you will find ail secrets. "Then get all the practice you can! Act whenever and wherever you sea the slightest unpromising opportunity! Never mind your friends; don't let them deter you! Treat home critics with contempt and grumblers with dis dain. Heat grows by friction so will your enthusiasm; and there'll be plenty of friction, don't you fear for that! And as the parts get bigger and the performances more frequent, so will the friction become more Intense and the enthusiasm more glowing. Nothing divides a household so much as private theatricals. That Is one of the sacrifices demanded by art, and when the Muses beckon, "papa" must take a back seat. Yes, be diligent In your Hi doing! Weary them with Shy lock and Portia, estrange them with Hamlet and Ophelln sadden them with your humor, lighten them with your tragedy only go on! Drama means "doing." Do your friends. So much the sooner will you bo able to do the public successfully. When you have practiced In private all the greatest parts of all the ages; when you havo forfeited your friends' Indulgence and your relations love; when you feel that only opportunity stands between you and greatness, go to some actor manager other than myself and set a banner to wave!"