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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 4, 1908)
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, OCTOBER 4, 1908. NEW BUILDINGS AT OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE STATE INSTITUTION HAS MADE RAPID GROWTH IN EQUIPMENT AND ENROLLMENT IN PAST TWENTY YEARS 0RF5ON AGRICULTT-RAL. COL, IE;B. Oorvallla, Or.. Oct. 3. (Spe cial.) From the possession of 35 acre of land to the ownership of I!0 acres; from one structure to a group of It college buildings; from an sttsndar.ee of ; to an enrollment of 150; from n Instructional force of five to a fac ulty of SS;.from a small denomination al school Jo the greatest utilitarian college In the West such In brief Is the story of the growth of the Oregon Agricultural College and of the prog ress made by It during the !1 years which have intervened between the opening of college In the Tear of Ha founding and the opening Monday for the present college year. In the year 1S5 the Legislature of the State of Oregon passed a bill which provided for the "permanent location ft the State Agricultural College at Corvallis. in Benton County." on con dition that the rltixens of that county would, within four years, erect on the "farm containing Si acres in the im mediate vicinity of said city . . . brick buildings for the accommodation of said college at the cost of tiot less than JJD.'KO." Two years later the Gov ernor of the state laid the corner atone of the structure which now stands as an eloquent testimonial of the generosity and enterprise of the citizens of Benton County.- Such was the origin of the Administration build ing and the birth of the Oregon Agri cultural College. This year, the twenty-first in the history of the State College, and the second under the administration of President William J. Kerr, will record more additions, alterations and ' im provements In buildings, equipment, instructional force and college govern ment than have ever been made in any one year In the hlsVry ot tne ro1" lege. ' The Agronomy building, which will reach completion about the last of Oc tober, is an Imposing brick and stone struriure. 71x130 feet. with three stories and a basement. It Is .being erected at a cost of I.1S.0P0. and win be the north wing of the proposed new Agricultural Hall. The first floor will house the departments of agronomy and horticulture: the second will be equipped to meet the needs of the de partment of domestic arts, and the third floor will be occupied by the school of commerce. The building is electric lighted and steam heatwd. The laboratories are floored with' tile and equipped with the most modern appli ances known to silence. The Mechanics Art building, costing (46.000, is an artistic creation of red brick, built In the ' shape of a right angle. 40 feet In width, with a total lenglh of 470 feet. It contain the general drafting rooms, the carpenter, woodworking, machine and blacksmith shops, as well as the college printing plant. The shops are all furnished with the latest equipment. The ma chinery is run by five 15-horsepower motors. Shepard Hall, the new student club building, which Is being erected under the auspices of the Y. M. and Y. W. C. A., will cost when completed some thing over $20,000. The basement con tains sn aquarium, shower baths, lock ers and banquet-rooms. The tirst floor will be devoted to soi'lal and club ac tivities, and the second floor will be made Into rooma for the use of the lit erary societies. The funds used In the erection of this building were sub scribed In a large part by atudentsand alumni of the college. The new barn, recently completed, la a frame building, with cement founda tion, commodious, modern and of at tractive design. The main part is 60s 100, and two stories high. Extending to the south are two one-story wings, each 4xS feet. The barn has a large storage capacity for grain and hay. T.-e stable m modern, well lighted and ventilated and equipped with 30 Indi vidual tubular Iron adjustable stalls. The wonderful Improvements In sani tation, convenience and attractiveness in this well-appointed farm building impress the visitor as nothing else can with the revolution which science has wrought In farming. These new buildings, with Waldo Hall, the beautiful women's dormitory, which, though completed last year, will ''' -wrr"' '-X-7 - itysi ,;5m 5a-t7i' "' 1 ! 1,1 11 'r'j-xi i S3C -yjJr-ZCZBT r I I lis i , . "WRw be uaed in Its entirety for the first time this year, add to the college facil ities for the work of scientific and academic Investigation and Instruction in a wav thnt can only be comprehended by being investigated, and to the beauty and lmpressiveness of the college campus, in a manner than can only be appre ciated by being seen. In addition to these new buildings, the capacity of the college is bwng in creased by Improvements and altera tions In almost every old building on the campus. The Administration build ing has been altered on the first and second flojots so as to make room for the offices of the financinl secretary and the registrar, and to provide more room for the library. The Installation of new equipment has also made neces sary extensive changes In both Agri cultural and Mechanical Halls. The s-vmnastum has been made vastly more attractive by improved systems of light ing, heating and sanitation. Thlrtv-three new faculty members appeared on the instructional staff of the college on Monday. This number In cluded two deans, three heads of depart ments, is Instructors and 10 assistants. Most of the new faculty people come here direct from study or Instructional work In the greatest educational Institutions of the East. All are specialists in their par ticular line of work. Professor Juliet Greer. A. B.. dean of Fomestlc Science, received her training at Vassar College and Columbia I'nlverslty. Dean Greer comes to Corvallis from Pratt Institute, where she has taught 'for the past' 10 years. . Professor J. A. Bexell. A. M., dean of the School of Commerce, is a graduate of the Augustana College, of Rock Island. " r-r r v v t(Ssn, rtrf ih ;is ... a- pvtrJfxr-ll I 111., and has taken extensive post-graduate work in the Universities of Minne sota and Chicago. Professor B. D. Angell, director of Phys ical Instruction, has studied at Harvard and Yale and has had special work under the tutelage of , the greatest instructors in pbvsical culture' in the world. Professor William F. Gaskino. Mus. Roseburg Women Dedicate Large Drinking Fountain to City or fv ..i-!N v. r.s-v. ' '-.'V ' 0$ . if H: : ' 1 i i I M r Vfl I V Ik WJ V - H a, RosKBrRG. Or.. Oct. 3. (Special.) Wednsday occurred a very In teresting event for the City of Roseburg. when the '96 Mental Cul ture Club and the W. C. T. I", save to the City of Roseburg a beau'iful brona drinking fountain with Thorwaldsen'a famous statue of Hebe. It stands 11 feet In height. The orenlng address was given by Dexter Rice, president f the hcal commercial club. The foun tain was then unveiled, and the pre it:iu;;oo of the fountain to the city, I vjwblht $&pT bo. PEDfOi BY was made on behalf of the Mental Cul ture Club, by its president, Mrs. S. C. Flint, and on behaif of the W. C. T. I", by its president. Mrs. A. C. Marsters. Th fountain was accepted on behalf of the city by Mayor E. V. Hoover Binger Hermann delivered an address. The Installation .of the water foun tain marks the first of a series of pub lic Improvements contemplated by the numerous "booster" organlxations of the city. Mr. A. C. Marstera. wife of ex-State Senator Marsters. Is president of tba 1. 1 j k v I C L JH WHO pEi.tVJeTD TrlBj W. C. T. I'., and in a large tneasura the credit for the reeuring of the new fountain for the city, is due her. Mrs. Marsters Is prominent In social cir cles, and is state recording secretary for the W. C. T. I". Mrs. S. C. Flint is the president of the '95 Mental Culture Club, having been elected for the third time In that .trganlxation. She la a descendant of Colonel Samuel Selden. of Revolution ary fame. She Is a prominent social leader and an enthusiastic clubwoman and church worker fiach., director of the School of Music, is a post-graduate of Hillsdale College Con servatory and the American Conservatory at Chicago. Ida A. Kidder. A. B.. College Librarian, is a graduate of the University of Illinois and has had experience in the best libra ries in the United States. The new instructors and assistants coma equally well equipped to carry on the work of their respective departments. To reap the beenflt from these splendid opportunities, students come to O. A. C. from every county in Oregon and from more than half of the states of the Union. The enrollment last year was 1156, and Judging from the advanced registration the attendance will reach 1600 before the end of the present year. Students are here from the farm, the village and the city to pursue the line of research into which their ambitions have led them. Some come to learn the secrets of scien tific agriculture: some for training in electrical, civil or mining engineering; some to study pharmacy or music or to receive expert training in the domestic arts and sciences. To all of these the col lege offers Instruction and means for re search and study. To the new men and women from farm or city, from wealthy homes or humble ones, the college offers equal opportunities. While Industrial or technical work is emphasized the importance of a thorough sreneral training of mind development and culture is recognized in all the work throughout the Institution. The mission of the college "is to train the mind and eye and hand to act in unison: to unfold and co-ordinate the faculties of mind and body; to develop a symmetrical manhood and womanhood and a just appreciation of clean, upright citizenship." Can't Cure Scotch Drunkenness Repressive Legislation Found to Be Hopeless in Combating the Evil. NOTWITHSTANDING regressive leg islation of the most extreme type, drunkenness in Glasgow and other cities of Scotland Is increasing with startling rapidity. If a people could be made exceptional ly temperate by Parliamentary experi ments, the people of Scotland ought to excel all their neighbors, but notorious ly this is far from being the case. The American speakers at an interna tional council of Congregatlonallsts held in Edinburgh a few days ago said they had seen more drunkenness one night in that city than could be witnessed in an American city of similar size in a month. Sir Andrew Reed, late Inspector-General of the Royal Irish Constabulary, Is equally emphatic. He visited Glasgow in August, 39n, and walked about the principal streets at night to see for him self what was to be seen. "I found."' he says, "towards the clos ing hour of the public-houses, some of the streets were crowded with drunken men. In no city in Europe, the United States or Canada I have ever visited did I see such a number of drunken persons. I thought the scene I witnessed was most disgraceful to any civilized place." The facts submitted by the Chief Con stables of Scottish towns and countries and by the Prison Commissioners, year after year, represent a condition of things which is not only startling, but is going from bad to worse. In the year 1904 Scottish temperance reformers of the coercive type obtained the latest of their cherished schemes the closing of all licensed houses at 10 P. M. and since that date, surprising though it appears, the ofpeial statistics of arrest for drunkenness in all the large towns show a large and continuous In crease. Glasgow affords the most striking il lustration of this growing demoralisation. In hla latest annual report. Issued In May last. Chief Constable Stevenson stated that the number of apprehensions in Glasgow for drunkenness in 1907 was 31.063. or 26.1 per KW of the estimated population. For an equal proportion of apprehensions we must, says Mr. Steven son, go back to the years previous to urOO. . Of tlie 2,053 arresti 1706 were ef fected on Sunday and that, too. In a city where complete "Sunday closing nas been enforced since 1S53. "Ten o'clock closing" has been in op eration in Glasgow since May, 1904. The movement was heralded by Sir Samuel Chlsholm. the leader of that group of reformers, as the Inauguration of a new era In temperance reform. Saint Bungo was to be transformed Into a sober, God-fearing, Sabbath-loving community. But what are the Incontestable facts provided each year by the Chief Consta ble? In 1903, with 11 o'clock closing, 11.8 per 1000 of Glasgow's population were convicted on charges of drunkenness. In 1905, under the "10 o'clock closing," the convictions represented 12.3 per 1000. In 1906. when the "10 o'clock closing" was admitted by all fair-minded persons to have had a fair trial, it was found that the arrests on account of drunkenness ran up to 19.344. against 14.309 in 1905, an increase from 18.3 to 24.2 per 1000 of the population. The Chief Constable, in these annual reports, candidly confessed his Inability to account for the deplorable state of things which his reports disclosed. Very soon public demands began to be raised for some inquiry Into or ex planation of result so disquieting and opposed to the confident promises of the reformers. In Glasgow a committee of 16 members of the Town Council was re luctantly appointed and In Edinburgh the subject was as reluctantly referred to the Chief Constable for report: still the question hung Are for many months. The chairman of the Glasgow commit tee was asked what was being done and he had to confess that the members were too busy to get together since January last, and he candidly admitted that many members would like the Inquiry to' drop altogether, so Indifferent were they to any further investigation. Incredible though this may seem, it was amply confirmed when a few days later the minutes of the committee were published, together with reports by the Chief Constable, the Deputy Town Clerk and the Police Prosecutor, to whom the subject had been submittted by the com mittee, as the best way of shelving the business. The chairman of the committee. Bailie Bruce Murray, one of the magistrates, submitted certain notes In which he said that it was clear they, could neliherj. Study Penmanship under a Pen Artist. Study Bookkeeping under an Expert Accountant Study Banking under a National Bank Cashier. Study Corporation Accounting under a Svstcmatlser. Study Arithmetic under a Thorough Mathematician. -Study Shorthand under a Convention nd Court Reporter. Study Typewriting under a Practical-Touch Operator. Study Letter-Writing. English, Spelling, etc.. under thorough ly competent instructors. . Tm Be Had ONLY at The Leading Bastaeas Colres;. Day mm Ktbt Seaaloaa. Seventh and Stark Sta. NIGHT SCHOOL Are You Killing Time? Why Not Better Yourself? . Phone Us. Main 513 A 2554 - mi .MS jVl iVJJa-A UJUrrfpfc !! I BUSINESS COLLEGE If I 1 WASM1NOTON ANOTINTH STS. fl I I PORTLAND. OREOON LJL XV WRITE FOR CATALOG Tht School that riaaes You n a Oocd roneton HOLMES-FLANDERS Private School 8T5 BAST BUHNBIDB ST.. PORTLAND. OR.' Oped! ntil varsity preparation ; normal training; course; practical English courses; age or prsvtous lack of opportunity no bar rier Individual or class Instruction. Phone B 1226. Taka E)ast Ankany Car. Call attar 1P M- Rent a Piano You will want a piano in your home this Fall and Winter. It will afford you much pleasure. Perhaps you feel that you are not ready to purchase the piano you desire to own. Most mu sicians look forward to the time when they will own a 8tlnway Piano. Rent a piano from us and all the money paid as rent will be applied toward the purchase of a Steinway. We have the largest stock of pianos In the city and the finest line of old standard, raliable. well-known makes. Read the names names as familiar as the names of old friends Stelnway, Knabe. A. B. Chase. Everett. Ludwlg. Packard. Conover. Kingsbury, Welling ton. Estey. Emerson. Kurtzmann, and others. Our main salesrooms, second floor. Sixth and Morrison. Entrance to store opposite Post oft ice. Sherman, Clay & Go. "The Heme of Dependable Pianos." Y. M. G. A. Night Schdol 32 Teachers 60 Classes TERM OPENS MONDAY, SEPTEM BER an, 1908. Fee S-Mo. Term Accounting- .1 f-0 Algebra ' Architectural Drawing;. 4.00 Arithmetic ... Bookkeeping 6.00 Business Correspondence. . ..... 2.00 Business Law Carpentry and Woodworking;.... 10.00 Chemistry, General and Applied.. 10.00 Civil Service (see Director j Commercial Geography. J-gO Commercial Show Card Writing. . 15.00 Electricity and Electrical Machin ery. 10.00 English, for Foreign Men 4-00 English, Elementary EnglishPractical... ............ .00 English, Advanced and Rhetoric. 4.00 English Literature .' 4.00 Freehand Drawing. . . J00 Geometry, Plane and Solid 8.00 German. -0 Latin 5.00 Machine Design. . 6.00 Manual Training (Boys) 6.00 Mechanical Drawing. . 5: Mechanics and Applied Mathe- matics Motors. Hydro-Carbon 10.00 Mining and Assaying 10.00 Penmanship 3.00 Pharmacy 12X Physical Geography 3.00 Physics 3.00 Plumbing , J0." Practical Lumbering 7.00 Real Estate Law 7.00 Salesmanship - J? Shorthand , j-00 Spanish 6.00 Surveying and Mapping .uu Telegraphy and Dispatching 10.00 Trigonometry 3.00 Typewriting a.J) Vooal Music 8.00 Wood Turning 10.00 Working Boy's English School... 4.60 Any self-respecting man or boy may become a Y. M- C. A. member and enjoy its privileges by paying the fee. Bldg. cor. 4th and Yamhill sts. Call or send for new illustrated catalogue. concur In nor deal adequately with the conclusions or recommendations of the report, which were mainly founded upon personal opinion, without having before them all the Information and views ob tainable from various sources bearing upon the statistics, the report ajid the situation generally. - The causes that had led to the increase of drunkenness in Glasgow, and unfor tunately, in other Scottish cities, also, such as Edinburgh, were multiform and recondite. Without a full and open in quiry, which would require time, pa tience and some expense, it was unlikely that any results which would command general confidence or which would be worthy of GlaBgow could be arrived at. It was proposed In committee that the report of the officials should be gener all approved and remitted to the magis trates, but this latter proposal was re jected by S to S so little desire did this special committee manifest of probing this social sore or in tracing the cause or causes of all this drunkenness to its source. The matter, however, can scarcely end here, for unwilling though the restrlctlonlsts are to have the matter further ventilated, the members of the liquor trade are resolved that the issue should be kept before the public until the responsibility for the admitted scandal Is ascertained. . The leaders f the Glasgow licensed trade have issued a vigorous criticism of the official reports. In this report to the special committee, the' Chief Constable frankly admitted the evil. He ascribed the primary cause to the inability of the artisan and laboring classes to make good use of "money In excess of their ordinary requirements." Why these classes in Glasgow should thus be singled out is not explained. , It is a fact that general holidays, the payment of army pensioners and payment to militia on dis bandment cause excessive drinking and an immediate rise in the number of ap prehensions. The licensed trade make a strong point of the matter which Is avoided by the official reports the tendency of restric tion to curtail the use of food by people who are drinking. Where Scottish cities present an un happy contrast to English and Continen tal cities is in the almost entire absence of restaurants or hotels catering for either visitors or residents In the matter of food at night. In no Scottish city is there any social life such as exists in London. Dining or supping at hotels or restaurants is discouraged by the licens ing authorities in Scotland, who. strange to say, pride themselves on the small number of their hotels. Glasgow with its 806,800 population, has but 17 Uoensed ho tels. Consequently, saloons are the most popular resorts. Glasgow Corr. In Pitts burg Despatch. MORE DRY OHIO COUNTIES Nineteen Have Voted Out Saloons, Numbering 480. ' COLUMBUS, O., Oct. . Perry County yesterday, by a majority of 1211 voted to banish saloons, of which there are 6 within its boundaries. Brown County, with 23 saloons, also voted to wipe out the liquor traffic today by a majority of 682. Nineteen counties have now held elections under the Rose law, and all have gone dry, the total number of saloons affected being 482. Tnder th revised law governing the em ployment ef women and children in Italy, nlsht work Is forbldrton for all females and tor males under 1 years of age. Less Than Half-Price Offer Biggest and Best Magazine Clubbing Offer of the Season Review of Reviews $3.00 Woman's Home Companion (to be ad vanced to) $1.25 Sunset Magazine $1.50 Road of a Thousand Wonders, worth. $1.00 $6.75 ALL FOR $3.00 This remarkable proposition to be offered to the people of Oregon. FOUR A-l AGENTS REQUIRED R. H. MADDEN, Field Manager B02 Swetland Building - Portland, Oregon. X V,