Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (March 22, 1908)
THE SUNDAY OKEGONIAN, PORTLAND, 31 ARCH 22. 1908. Members University of Oregon DebatingTeams T OF Washington Commission Wiil Soon Find Itself Facing Serious Deficit. RAILROADS HELP IT ALONG 6 RAILROAD BOARD 5 0 FUNDS GMESTEEFIELD CLOTHES : Ait-used of Purposely Kxteuding Valuation Hearing iu Order to Fmbarrass Hoard Members Pay Their Own Expenses. 01Y.MPIA. Wash., March 2J. (Spe cial.) The Railroad Commission is fac ing a serious shortage of funds, and if It Is able to complete the work out lined for this year it will be only by a narrow margin. Attorneys for the railroads have discovered the embar rassment of the Commission and are suspected of attempting" to proionff the valuation hearings with their attend ant expenses as long as possible to further embarrass the Commission. The Commissioners and three em ployes are safe on the salary question until the end of the fiscal year, because they are provided for specifically in the appropriations bill of the last Leg islature, and the money set apart to pay them cannot be expended for any other purpose. But the contingent fund of $42.00 now has a surplus of only $5000 with 13 months to run before the end of the fiscal period, or It months before the regular session of the Legis lature can provide an emergency appro priation. Pay Own Traveling Expenses. To conserve the contingent fund, the Commissioners are now paying their traveling expenses out of their own . pockets and will look to the Legis lature to reimburse them. Out of this contingent fund, the Commission is paying three employes a total of $400 per month in salaries, which alone is enough to exhaust the balance in the fund before April 1. 1909, the begin ning of the new fiscal year. Aside from these salaries there are dozens of other items to be met each month, such as witness fees, station ery bills, printing, engineering sup plies, emergency clerk hire. etc. In February the warrants drawn against the contingent fund exceeded slightly $1000. At that rate the balance would be exhausted in five months, leaving the Commission a body of salaried men with no money to carry on Investiga tions or further hearings. Kach of the three Commissioners draws a salary of $4000 per year and the three employes mentioned get t '000 each. The three other regular employes now paid out of the con tingent fund are the bookkeeper at $100 per month, stenographer at $125 and an expert on engineering and construction at $175. It is believed the work of the last will he com pleted this month; . Experts Come High. The sum of $36,000 appropriated for the salaries of the commissioners and three specified employes is of course intact but as stated above cannot be touched for any other purpose. Of the $42,000 appro priated for contingent expenses on Feb ruary 1. $37,006 had been expended with more than one year to run. A big Item in this expenditure was the amount paid to Expert Engineer Gillette brought here from New York temporarily at an ex pense to the state of $1000 per month, to made estimates and testify as to the value of railroad property. It is diffi cult to segregate the cost to the state of Mr. Gillette's work from other items, but the known expenditures for the work of him and his assistants totals $12,500. 1.. J I. Gray, the expert who is receiving $175 per month, is the only one of Gil lette's assistants still on the payroll, it Is his work, which it is expected will be completed this month. Curtails Board's Work. The Commission expects to make its valuation findings and segregate the value of the railroads for state purposes from their value for interstate traffic before May 1. This Is to follow the in vestigation as to whether the rates in existence give the railroads a fair return upon the value of their property. To keep the record perfect formal hearings must be held and witnesses must be summoned who will have to be paid. To economise, the Commission will not hold these hearings in Olympia. which would entaib the additional expense of bringing witnesses from all parts of the slate. The Commission will hold the hearings in different localities In Eastern Washington, and at these hearings the Commissioners will pay their own ex penses. By the first of June the money available in the contingent fund will be so little that thereafter for the balance of the year it is Ukely the work of the Commission can only be perfunctory. .MtROR 1VY COMES APRIL IS Superintendent Ackerman Preparing . Programmes for Schools. SALDM. Or.. March 2t. (Special.) Arbor Kay occurs in Oregon this year on April 1$ and It will probably be observed this year more generally, than ever before, not withstanding the pupils and teachers of many schools have anticipated the occa sion to a large extent by planting roses In the Winter. Superintendent of Public Instruction J. It. Ackerman has suitable material for Arbor Iay exercises and will send copies of the pamphlet out to the various counties early next week. Public Interest In civic improvement, and espe cially the rose-planting campaign in Port land, have aroused new Interest in Arbor In order to encourage teachers and pu pils in improving school grounds. Super intendent Ackerman has arranged to se cure photographs of some of the best kept grounds in each county and to keep these 4ietures on display in his office, together with the names of the teachers and the schools that have been instru mental in promoting the cood work. I.l.TS .1CTK-.MILL COXTKACTS Hoard of Control Prepares for Xew Factory at Penitentiary. OLYMPIA. Wash.. March 21. (Special.) The State Board of Control today opened bids and awarded contract for the construction of the new jute mill at the State Penitentiary at Walla Walla. The contract for furnishing structural Mcel went to the Minneapolis Steel & Machinery Company, whose bid was STtsaa. The Gilbert Hunt Company, of Walla Walla, was awarded the contract for sup plying material for the cages and window bars, the contract price being $4020. The order for the machinery of the new mill was placed 15 months ago with a tirm In Scotland, and the Board exvect to ivy- I - k : I - i F ; r y ' I ...! AITIKMATIVE JKMJSK H. ! 'C It 4 '"1 NEGATIVE CLARENCE L. WHEALDOX, LEADER; THOMAS R. TOWNSEND, EARL KILPATRICK. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene, Or., March 21. Oregon's two debating teams are whipping arguments into shape for the forensic contests Thurs day night. March 26, with University of Washington and . University of Idaho. Both teams are determined to retain the laurels won last year, when Ore gon's debaters became champions of eight states. The two teams take the affirmative and negative of the question, "Re solved, That the present laws applying to Chinese immigration should be ex tended to apply in a like manner to Japanese immigration." The affirmative team meets th$ Uni versity of Idaho trio in Eugene before the following judges: Professor A. J. Prideaux, of Willamette University; President Crooks, of Albany College, and G. W. Montague, of Portland. The negative team goes to Seattle on the ame night to debate the Unl- " versity of Washington. The judges of the Seattle debate are: Mayor Alexan hear within a few weeks of its arrival in New York. The Board has received numerous letters from the traffic men of Eastern railroads having Western connections asking for the contract to forward the machinery. It Is very probable that bids will be called for and a contract awarded for hauling it westward. WOFLD SHORTEN THE DEBATES Pullman Professor Says Hour Suffi cient to Tire Out Audience. ' WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE. Pullman. March 21. A radical change in conducting intercollegiate debates is ad vocated by Dr. Albert E. Egge, head of he department of English. His objec tions to the present method is that three speakers on a side having 15 'minutes each in which to speak, together with the eight minutes given the leaders in rebuttal, is too long to hold the atten tion of an audience. In defending his plan, he said: "A public contest is in the nature of an entertainment and should be of the high est possible excellence. In a public de bating contest there should be not more than two speakers, one on each side. The speaker on the affirmative might have 20 minutes for his argument, the speaker on the negative 30 minutes for construct ive argument and rebuttal, and the speaker on the affirmative again ten min utes for rebuttal. This arrangement would make the debate last one hour, which is long enough, an yet not too long, and would prevent repetition. GET DATA OX GRAIN RATES State Commission to Hear Com plaints at Ritzville May 11. OLYMPIA. Wash.. March 21. (Special.) May 11 has been set by the Railroad Commission as the date at which the hearing on the reasonableness of the grain rates will be taken up at Ritzville. This hearing will be made on what is known as the Cunningham complaint made from this town. The Commission will have completed its findings on the cost data by this time. The hearing at Ritzville is one of a series to be made by the Commission on complaints from all parts of the state. Each complaint will be given a hearing at the town or place from which it originated. Most of these are on station facilities. The Commission will hear the com plaints, but will make no findings as to the reasonableness of the grain rates until after the constitutionality of the i commission laws have beefi passed upon by the State Supreme Court. NOVEL CONTEST IN NEWBERG UepubHoaiis to Decide Which of Two Men Shall Sock Office. XEWBERC Or., March 21. (Special.) In the Republican County convention in Yamhill four years ago D. H. Turner de feated J. L. Hoskins for Recorder, the latter being a candidate for a third term, and now Mr. Tnrner is out asking for the nomination for a third term. As a factor in the present Scontest New-berg has two candidates for the nomination, J. H. Rees and R. B. Ijninville and their friends deeming it unwise for both of them to continue in the race have in duced them to enter a friendly contest here at home and let the Republican voters of Newberg decide which one of them shall drop out. Consequently a voting place will be opened on Tuesday afternoon of next week, with judges in charge, and Repub licans residing inside the corporation will be invited to participate. Perfect fitting glasses 1 at Metzger'a. BOND, LRADEIt; WALTER EATON, der Bethune, of Vancouver. B. C, and Judge Hadley, of the Washington su preme bench. The third judge has not ben decided upon. The affirmative team comprises Jesse H. Bond. '09, leader; Walter Eaton, 09 first colleague, and Wilson C. Nicholas! 10. second colleague. Jesse H. Bond is registered from Florence, Or. He is Oregon's repre sentative in the interstate oratorical contest, which takes place at Eugene in June. He is an engineering student, a junior and a member of the Laurean Literary Society. Walter Eaton is a Eugene boy. He is carrying more hours than any other etudent in college. Eaton also is an engineering student. He is manager of the Oregon Weekly, a junior, and a member of the Laurean, Literary Society. Wilson C. Nicholas is enrolled from Portland. His major is economics. Nicholas is a sophomore and a member of the Laurean Literary Society. The negative team is composed of Clarence L. Whealdon, '10. leader; E "LEND A HAXD" ADVERTISES FOR TWO APPRENTICES. Editor of Penitentiary Publication Finds, He Can't Do All His W ork in 14 Hours a Day. SALFiM.' Or.. March 2L (Special.) One publication that is evidently not troubled by the rules of typographical unions is "Lend-a-Hand." the monthly paper pub lished by tile prisoners at the Oregon i Penitentiary. In its March issue the pa- 1 per advertises for two apprentices and will probably have room for them. Applicants must have at least three years yet to serve In prison. No compen sation is offered during any stage of the apprenticeship and "no extra privileges go with a position in the printing office." That the apprentices will find conditions considerably different from those which exist in the ordinary printing office is indicated by an explanatory note on the editorial page in which it is said that "not a line of this paper is prepared be fore it is put into type. The editor works- 14 hours a day. seven days a week, and has not much time to devote to writing. When he is not working on the paper, he is doing job work for the Institution." The editor of the prison paper lias been troubled lately because of a shortage in the supply of type, but in the last issue acknowlements are made for a oO-pound font of body type purchased by Ben Selling. The American Type Founders Company, B. S. Pague, W. C. Bristol, Bauer & Green, Cake & Cake. A. C. Emmons. Harry Hogue. C. M. Idleman. Kd Mendenhall. J. H. Middleton and George W. Stapleton. The March number is a 12-page paper, about the dimensions of the Saturday evening' Post, well printed on a goo.i grade of paper and free from typographi cal errors. Gold Footballs for Players. WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE, Pullman. March 21. ISpecial.) In appre ciation of the splendid record made by "77" Seventy-seren for Colds and March winds are the most trying to and dreaded by delicate people, and even catch the strong and robust un awares. Humphreys' "Seventy-seren" in the pocket is a greater protection against taking Cold than a heavy coat or warm blanket, because a dose of "Seventy-seven" keeps the blood in circulation and prevcuts and breaks up Colds and Grip. At Drugstores, 23c. Humphreys' Homeo. MUicine Co., Cor. William and John SireeU, New York! MIL SON" C. NICHOLAS. Thomas R. Townsend, '09, first col league; Earl Kilpatrick 09, second col league. Whealdon, who had the rare honor of making the university debating team of last year, while a freshman, received his "early forensic training at Pacific University. He is registered from Shedds. Or., is a sophomore, a member pf the Laurean Literary So city and "the Delta ATpha Fraternity. Whealdon was beaten by two points in the recent tryout for Oregon's repre sentative in the interstate oratorical contest. Thomas R. Townsend is enrolled from Roseburg, Or. This is his second year in debate, he having been a mem ber of Oregon's negative team which defeated" Id-aho last - year at Moscow. 'Townsend ie editor-in-chief of the Ore gon Weekly, a junior, a member of the Laurean Literary Society and a member of the Delta Alpha Fraternity. Earl Kilpatrick is from La Grande, Or. This Is his first year in debate. .Kilpatrick is a junior and a member of the Philologian Literary Society. the football team of the Washington State College during the season of 1907. and es pecially because of the victory over the University of St. Louis in Spokane, last Christmas, the business men of Pullman clubbed together and raised a fund with which to buy the members i of the team, the coach and manager, gold footballs. The engraving on the footballs will con sist of the words. "W. S. C, 1907." and the total score made during the season, which was 2S2, as against 18 for the op ponents. " SEEK SLAYER OF WALXENDE Sliver Lake Citizens Pledge Reward of $350 for His Capture. , SILVER LAKE, Or., March 21.-(Spe-eial.) Citizens of this community are thoroughly aroused over the murder of Julius Wallende, and at a recent mass meeting unanimously adopted the follow ing resoutions: " Whereas, Julius Wallende was wilfully and cruelly.jmurdered in cold blood on the night of December 27, 1907, and after being murdered was thrown Into Silver Creek, and ills body not being recovered until March 13. 1!R8: and Whereas, The people of Silver Lake are most desirous of seeing the law upheld and the guilty parties punished for this diabolical crime, t and have shown by their acts that 'they mean what they say by subscribing and paying in cash the sum of J350, which is now deposited in the safe of F. M. Chrisman of this NO STUDENTS, NO GAS NO COCAINE n'FT If your gums bleed when you brush them, you have pyorohoe, a disease which, if let run, causes recession and teeth to loosen. . We positively cure the above disease. I TEETH . This office is equipped with all the latest appliances and formulas for do ing high-class work. OUR PRICES 22-K Crown ...$3.00 Bridge Work, per tooth S5.00 Logan Crown S3.SO to $5.00 Best Rubber. Plate S8.00 Aluminum Lined Plates SIO.OO to 15.00 Silver Fillings; Sl.OO Gold Fillings 82. OO to 85. OO Vegetables Vapor used only by us for Painless Extracting: 504 CHICAGO PAINLESS DENTISTS COR. TH ASD WASHINGTON. Be sure you are in the right office. Lady attendant. 1'hones Main SSS0. A 5340. THEY ARE THEIR 269 place, for the arrest and conviction of the murderer or murderers of Julius Wal lende; and Whereas. We, the people of Silver Lake, in mass meeting1 assembled on this the 17th day of March, 1908, believe It is the duty of our state, as well as our county, to assist us in every honorable way to ferret out aiid bring to justice the per petrator or perpetrators of this crime ; therefore be it Resolved, That we request Hon. George Chamberlain, Governor of the State of Oregon, to assist us in our efforts to bring to justice the person or persons who committed this crime, by offering such re ward as in his judgment he thinks proper Pay Us According to Your Convenience The Big East Side Store Offers Wonderfully Inducive Values in Ladies' Fashionable Tailored Spring Suits. Prices in Every Instance Far Below SMARTLY TAILORED SUITS Our Suits impress upon you their exclusive character and charm. In selecting this, our first Spring showing, we visited only those tailors whose names are familiar, whose rank is well at the head in Ladies' Tailoring circles. Excellent showing of new Street Suits, all strictly tailored, in fancy invisible stripes, slightly mannish stuffs, plain leading shades. A guaranteed saving of 25 per cent on every, suit. We guarantee you a selection in exact accordance with your better taste. MAKE US A SMALL PAYMENT DOWN THEN $1.00 A WEEK You're welcome to start an account pay a little down and a little at a, time for anything selected. No extra charge for the accommodation. Spring Bargains in Men's Suit Departm't sTrvi: '-i zli ALL AROUND THE -CORNER, UNION AVE. AND EAST BURNSIDE Chesterfield Suits and Topcoats made espe cially and exclusively for us and for you. The new Spring models are exceptionally good long lapels, two and three buttons some with patch pockets backs fitted in with' a little flare. Just the right length. A dozen styles in a hundred or more fabrics". The quality of the fabrics, the style, the good, honest workmanship, make them the finest ready-to-wear clothes in the world. GUARANTEED TO RETAIN SHAPE FOR ONE YEAR If the front of coat curls back or otherwise loses its shape in one 3-ear's wear, we will gh'e customer new garment, free. $22.50 to $50. M.GRA - 271 MORRISON and just for the arrest and conviction of the murderer or murderers. . Resolved, That it is the wish of this meeting and the citizens of Silver Lake, that our honorable county judge, B. Daly, should assist us by offering a suitable re ward in behalf of Lake County for the arrest and convk:tion of the murderer or murderers of Julius Wallende. and be lieving this as we fully do. we demand of him that he offer such sum as a re ward, as in his judgment he deems best, and the financial condition of the county can afford. Resolved. That a copy of these resolu tions be sent to Hon. Georce Chamber lain. Governor of Oregon, Hon. B. Daly. Elsewhere Quotations. inese fine Ladies crushes free to n wno Attend Our Soring SATURDAY GEVURTZ BROS. Big East Side Store 00 ST. county judge of Lake County, The Ore gonian and Journal of Portland, as well as to each of our county papers. Signed by the president and secretary of this meeting. F. X. V. CHRISMAN. Chairman. C. W. EMBODY, Sec. Dated March 17. 1908. San Francisco -Fifty-six bags of mall and an automobile that had been shipped as freight were saved irom the wreck of the steamer Pomona, at Fort Ross Friday. Forty-six bags of mail yet remain In the forward hold and all this may be saved, as well as a larpe quantity of the fright. The Pomona herself will be a total low. Opening Next EVENING ALL AROUND THE CORNER, UNION AVE. AND EAST BURNSIDE j j .