13 THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, OCTOBER 30, 1910. To. the Taxpayers of ftSie City ef. Pot and, Oregon Is it not time for ycm to stop and consider what is being done to you by the non-taxpayers in the community t At the meeting held at the instigation of M. Q. Munly at the Commercial Club, called to denounce the Tort of Portland Commission, because they dared to take any exception to his pet hobby, the Broadway Bridge, when a committee was or dered to arrange a mass meeting at which to denoance not only the Tort of Portland Commission, bat all of those who would be dubbed a "tight-wad" and a "fit subject for Hol man'a cheap funerals." The Oregbnian says: "Several men foes of the Broad way bridge are damaging the city, impairing its credit and exasperating the public all this within technical license of the law. In early days, when justice had to be meted out in a hurry, characters that annoyed the community were sternly dealt with by stroi men, who took the public welfare into Vi jl u. Li3 m-. -. - V; :-r-; : " V M v 1 JI Vv it S - m I m M. A Section of the Detroit River Tunnel, Showing- the Wooden Sheathing on Sides, Also the Temporary Bulk heads in Place, Beady for Launching. are opposing this unnecessary and extra obstruction in the river, I suggested that the committee be named from the tax payers, bnt this was ruled out of order, as it did not suit the Tiews of Boss Munly, and his lieutenant, IL J. Parkinson, the labor agitator, both of whom explained that it i at a taxpayers meeting, bnt a meeting of the Toting dtiseaa. Think of that, yoo suffering taxpayers of this city and county! Ton are not to hare any say in the management and conduct of these matters. Your duty is to pay the bills and hold your tongue. That has been the system of Boss Munly from the very beginning. Leaving it to the to ting citiaens means lear ing it to the mob. They will vote for every scheme that means the spending of other people's money. At his celebrated packed meeting, in Albina, at which he had gathered every rote-hunter and vote-getter, Boss Manly openly declared that anyone who dared to oppose their wishes h 7 "? . 3 'i .-.1 4 Launching Tubes. their own hands, sometimes called an emergency committee. How long and in how many ways will this community suffer iuclf to be bedeviled and harassed by the Prank Kiernanst" Talk about free speech in this country. "Why, the streets of Portland, Sixth and "Washington and other streets,, are nightly held by socialist and anarchist preachers, in order to maintain a principle of free speech. This whole Broadway Bridge matter from its very inception has been dragooned and bludgeoned through by Boss Munly and his friends. This country went to war to uphold the principle of "no taxation without representation," but in this city the principle is being reversed. Boss Munly and Labor Agitator Parkinson and their ilk want all the representation without taxation. TVho are Judge M. O. Munly and IT. J. Parkinson T What have they done for this community that should entitle them to all the sayt What industry, if any, have they founded t What great improvement have they brought about t Who have they 1 located here that were of aid and assistance in the upbuilding of the City of Portland T They are lampooning and denounc ing everybody who fails to fall in with their views; stirring up dissension and strife in this fair city; defaming, slandering and villifying men whose lives are a credit to the city; and setting one locality against the other if their views are not promptly taken up. Doea M. G. Munly 's name appear on the tax rolls of this city and county; and IT. J. Parkinson, the labor agitator, who stood up and complained so bitterly about the extent of territory that the Port of Portland had a right to levy taxes onf It remained for this gentleman to utter a long, loud and bitter complaint, and yet the tax rolls do not disclose his name as a taxpayer in this city or county. There were not any taxpayers complaining at that meeting. I am not an apologist for the Port of Portland Commis sion, composed of. Messrs. W. D. Wheelwright, Charles P. Adams, C. F.' Swigert, J. C. Ainsworth, P. L. Willis, Captain Archie Pease and John DriscolL They are all well-known and reputable citizens of long standing in this community, and are amply able to defend-themselves. Just contrast their work towards the upbuilding of Portland, and the standing of these gentlemen with that of M. G. Munly and H. J. Parkinson. I have opposed the Broadway Bridge, and have been attacked by Boss Munly and his right-hand man, H. J. Parkinson, and desire to say that I have opposed the Broadway Bridge or any other bridge north of the Steel Bridge for the following reasons: First The Broadway Bridge election was obtained by Boss Munly through a misapprehension and misstatement of the facts in connection with the new proposed railroad bridge; he giving it out as a fact that there would, not be a wide upper deck on the new Steel Bridge; and this at a time when the Madison-Street Bridge was out of commission, entailing an unusual congestion of traffic on the other bridges. . Second I have and will maintain that only taxpayers who have to foot these bills are the ones to determine what they want, where they want it, and how much they want to spend for it. Third I am firmly convinced, after havirig inspected the tubes at Detroit built for the Michigan Central Railroad under the Detroit Kiver to Windsor, Canada, that it is the proper thing for this city, as our river is narrow and every particle of it will be needed for commerce in the great city that we are building here. The Willamette River must be the gateway and outlet for the enormous country east and south of us. Wa should do everything to deepen, widen and make available every particle of the harbor that we have. Not only is Detroit putting tubes under the river, but Chicago is now putting in tubes for street railway and railroad purposes at La Salle street, and many other cities in the Union now have subways and tubes. Sydney, New South Wales, has appointed a Royal Commission of naval and military officers who report against putting a bridge across their bay, and are proceeding to put tubes under the bay. Think of that. We are going to bridge our little river; and those people, in order to avoid obstructing navigation, are going to put tubes under their bay. Their report attached herewith has spurred San Francisco - V - - I' ' ' 1 hvri . Ia K-w - 'J Tubes Partly Sunk. . the engineering skill of their eompany, concrete tubes could be put under the river that would last forever, giving greater facilities for crossing the river, and not interfere with naviga tion. This, I am most heartily in favor of, and I do not see any occasion for burdening the taxpayers to erect a bridge 1300 feet below the new Steel bridge, costing the taxpayer two millions of dollars, or nearly as much as the present four bridges have cost the people. There is no necessity nor occasion to build the Broadway bridge, particularly at this time, when the river is taken up. With the completion of the Madison-street bridge and the erection of the new Steel bridge, to be followed with the taking down and removing of the old Steel bridge, no more bridges should be put across. the river where the turning basin is needed. I am in favor of buying twenty feet on the south side of the Burnside-street approaches, also the Morrison street, and make the bridges the full width, giving easy access to and fro. The new Steel bridge being thirteen feet wider than Washington street, will afford more service than the present two bridges, and will be ample for a long time to come. In the meantime we should prepare to build tubes under the river, as modern cities are doing. u .-X1 ,3oi'C--?I7rS--l3'o- Ju i & JjiWnf Mwfepywi KV. TZ: Section of Completed Tunnels. to putting tubes under the bay from San Francisco to Oakland, and yet we, after twenty years' taxing to deepen and widen the river, are now proposing to cover the harbor portion with othe and unnecessary bridges. Mr. Theo. E. Knowlton, of the Detroit River Tunnel Com- . pany, whom I took up and down both sides of, and on the river, stated that, with our lumber on the river bank, and with the sand and gravel in the river itself, a tube or set of tubes could be built very eheap here. They simply put a dredging machine in the river and scow along side with a mixing plant, and with Taxpayers of the City of Portland consider the amount of taxes being piled up, largely by the non-4axpaying voter. You must organize if yon want to protect your interests in this city. They vote the measures through; you pay the bills. If the bills become too enormous, they can flit and move from the city, while the taxpayers havevto stay here and foot tha bills. It is time for you to organize in some way to have a public service commission of taxpayers to take these matters in hand for the welfare of the city. CHARLES K. HENRY. J TUNNELS UNDER THE BAY RECOMMENDED FOR SYDNEY Problem of Traffic Across Port Jackson Similar, on a Smaller Scale, 1 to That of San Francisco Harbor. (Merchants Association Review, San Francisco, August, 1910.) Of moeh tntrt to 8n Francisco ! report summarised In Enclnrlns of a royal commission appointed to devla means of retting the traffic acroaa Port Jack eon. the harbor of Sydney. N. S. W. Conditions there very nearly parallel those on our own bar. except In retard to distance, which are a-reater here: and the following statement of the problem. In general terms, reads very much as though It were a description of soma of Kan Francisco's own difficulties: "The City of Sydney la situated en the south side of the great land-locked harbor known as Port Jackson, and on tha north side there Is a lre and rapidly developing- suburban district. The population of this district Is Increasing; at the rate of per cent per annum, and Is estimated to reach I0T.009 by 117. The rapid transit traffic of the district. Including street railways and suburban railways. Increased (t per cent In the period from 101 to 10T, and ag-greg-ated lt.4S7.000 passengers In 1)07. AV9TR4.LJAX FERRT TRAFFIC. "All passenger communication between tha city and tha northern suburbs Is effected by five lines of steam ferryboats, operated by the Sydney Ferries Company, tha total annual traffic ef which Is estimated at 13.000.000 passengers. In addl. tlon there are two ferries for vehicular traffic, which carry together about 430.000 vehicles annually. The largest of tb ferryboats are double-deck steamers, carrying from 1250 to 1350 passengers, and having; seating accommodation for about 1000. The service is said to be good, but the enormous growth of the trafflo Indicates the need of some better system of communication. Tha ferry company considers It can deal with the Increasing traffic by putting on larger boats and running a more frequent service. On the ether hand this would Increase congestion of traffic In tha harbcr and the difficulty (and danger) of navigation, especially In view of the steady Increase In the shipping trafflo of the port of Sydney. Occasional dense fogs are experienced In the harbor. Another difficulty Is that the ferry lines converge at one point on the city aide, diverging to different points on the suburban side. "Special tunnel designs were prepared at the request of the commission by Mr. H. H. Dare. Assoc M. Inst. C. E.. and Mr. W. Hutchinson. IX. Inst. C. E. The former proposed a high-level tunnel consisting of tubes sunk In sections In a trench dredged In the bed of the harbor, on the system adopted for the Michi gan Central Ry. tunnel (now practically completed) for crossing the Detroit River at Detroit. The latter proposed a deep tunnel driven by the shield system, and lined with castlron. having the crown about 4 feet below low water. The bridge project is not regarded by the commission with favor. The naval and military authorities who gave evidence before the commission considered that a tunnel would be preferable to a bridge. TX'MXCLS PROMISE THE BEST SERVICE. The commission's report discusses the tunnel question in Its relation to tha accommodation of railway, atreet railway and highway traffic The commission arrives at tha conclusion that aubways or tunnels provide the best and most economical method of establishing communication. Their reasons may be summarised as follows: (1) Subways will not obstruct the harbor in any way. while any practicable bridge must have a pier In the harbor; (3) the combined capital cost of the neces sary subways for all classes of trafflo would be considerably less than that of a suitable bridge; (3) tunnels for railway, street railway and highway traffic could be "undertaken and completed separately and Independently, while with the bridge the whole structure must be completed before any of the re spective services would be available; (4) tunnels would be con venient and comfortable, and would enable railway and street railway passengers to reach the different parts of the city more easily than by bridge: (S) the railway and street railway systems could be connected .'nore satisfactorily tor thorough traffic by tunnels than by bridge: ) Increased accommodation, when required, could be provided more economically by addi tional tunnels than by bridge." WHAT THET WOULD COIT. For a double-track railway tunnel two miles long, the com mission's estimate of cost Is $3,765,000. Including $400,000 for a station. This is at the. rate of $330 per foot. The estimated oost of a street railway , tunnel J H miles long Is f3.700.000 or $330 per foot. The estimated coat of the proposed highway tunnel. 1 1-8 miles long. Is $2,510,000, or $360 per foot. It Is proposed that the tops of all these tunnels shall be forty feet below low-water mark,' the work being done on the Detroit River pattern. In the shape of tubes sunk In sections. The transbay suburban traffic of San Francisco is far heavier than that of Sydney, comparing, for 1905, in the ratio of 35 to 13. The populations about the bay are larger. The fogs are worse, and the dangers to navigation greater. Mere length of bore Is not much of an obstacle In tunnel construction, espe cially In the case of a sunken tube, which could be supported on piling foundations. CHICAGO'S LA SALLE STREET TUBES TO BE PLACED NEXT MONTH Twin Tunnel, Each Section of Which Is 18 Feet in Di ameter, Will Be Floated to Position Under River. CONCRETE IS USED Portion of Subway System for Surface and Elevated Lines Will Relieve Congestion Upon Bridges. (Christian Science Monitor, Chicago.) CHICAGO The giant twin steel and concrete tubes that are to form the water link of the streetcar tunnel under the Chicago River at La Salle street, are expected to be put in place and qujetly resting in their cradle under the bed of the river by the middle of October. These tubes, which are approximately 18 feet in diameter each, are being constructed of steel and concrete in a drydock on Goose Island, about 1H miles north of La Salle street In the north branch of the river. 'When they are finished the ends will be bulk-headed to about one-third of the top and the water will be let into the dock. The bulkheads will keep the water out of the tubes and they will float with a little less than half above the water. Then they will be floated down the river to La Salle street. The bulkheads will be knocked out, the water will rush In and the tubes will sink quickly to the bottom. It Is not expected that navigation will be impeded for more than half a day by the entire work. ' A big steam dredge has been at work for several weeks scooping out a great trench across the bed of the river. A steel cradle will be put In place In the bottom of this trench, and Into this the tubes will be guided. The tubes will be con nected wlth. the land tunnel at each end, and the water will then be pumped out. When completed the tunnel will be used by a number of the surface streetcar lines to relieve the congestion caused by so many lines using the State, Clark and Wells-street bridges to and from the north and south divisions of the city. The tunnel Is also to form a part of the subway system used by surface and elevated lines, to be built by the city. It will be low enough to permit the passage through the river of boats drawing 25 feet.