11 pah t are BIYIDE 1T If there is any one thing: in which every stockholder of your organization, every officer of your concern is interested, it is this little matter of paying: dividends Perhaps there is no one place in the average large concern where there are more leaks, more wasteful plans of operation, than in your delivery system. It is an actual fact that not two firms in one hundred know the cost of their present system of delivery. It is not surprising, therefore, that there are wonderful possibilities for economy in this department and that economy is most advantageously secured through a high-grade, reliable motor truck like the FEDERAL TIIE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, 18, 1912. FEDE UCKS Federal Frocks Are Stand ardi zed Federal Gasoline Trucks have secured probably the most phenomenal sale ever accorded motor trucks in the shortest space of time. $1800 fl II II I EM CHASSIS ONLY F. O. B. DETROIT &r-mA t3a : i mnrg m i i n i ii I k IB a Sanaa - '-.j III! 111! I V Jsssd wCTL h -u May We Send You Some Facts and Figures on ,the Solution of Your Delivery Problem? STODDARD -DAYTON AU1 Exclusive Northwest Distributors Caution! Avoid pirates and would-bs agents. Our Mr. Gilbert sells the only genuine Federal Trucks in Portland Sales Office, 690 Washington St. Service Department, 86 Tenth St. "BETTER SERVICE" POPULAR DEMAND Drastic Ordinances Aimed to Make Electric Company Add More Cars. COMPLAINTS ARE GENERAL Citizens From. All Sections of City Say Recent Iegislatlon Is Result of Rising Indignation Against Power Firm's Attitude. Better streetcar service rather than unreasonable or unfair legislation is what the majority of citizens. Includ ing members of the City Council under stand to be the purpose of the ordinance passed by the City Council last Wed nesday requiring the Portland Railway, IJght Sc. Power Company to establish a 3-cent fare for streetcar passengers who are required to stand. Expressions of opinion from members of the Coun cil and from patrons or tne car com pany are to this effect. Following are short expressions gleaned from patrons and Councllmen since the ordinance was passed: Councilman Magulre In preparing and fighting for the passage of this ordinance I had in mind a better car service. The complaints have been general in almost every part of the city for years" that the company is not doing what is right In the matter of accommodating the public I have In vestigated the conditions carefully. Time after time I have counted more than 100 persons crowded into cars with seating capacities of 34 persons. This condition I have found on the Alberta cars for years. The other day I went to Woodlawn. When the car I rode on arrived at Alberta there was some track trouble and the passengers were required to transfer to another car. On the first car there were four per sons standing and every seat was taken. This carload was required to push Into another car which had a load equally as heavy. what we want is better service. The present E-cent carfare seems all right and there Is no kick about it, but there is a kick against the service. Better Service la Demand.- Councilman Clyde I consider the matter of better car service one of the most important in the future of the city. Conditions are absolutely deplor able at present. What the people want is more cars and better service. If the company was giving a reasonable serv ice there would be no complaint. There is no desire on my part to force unfair legislation onto the company, but there Is a desire tJ force the company to give better service, which the company has refused to do to date. A. W. Lawrence Take a ride on the Ft. Johns cars after working hours In the evening if you want to be convin ced of the conditions. When night after night working women and men are required to hang to straps while the cars slowly wind their way through the business and residence districts, it Is time there was a change. The com pany does not seem willing to give the service so why not force them to? A. D. Cridge Better service is de manded in almost every part of the city. There is no reason why the com pany should not give It. J. B. Ryan Anything for better car service. I haven't had time to look into the merits of the new ordinance, but if it will bring improved service I m In favor. Standing Hard on Drunks. John Shillock I don't mind standing In cars myself night after night the year 'round, but I hate awfully to see drunken men who are not able to stand have to hanar to straps. W. E. Flnzer I would rather stand up In a streetcar than to be passed up and have to wait for the next car be cause all the seats on the first car were taken. There's chance for lm provement in streetcar service. Martin Hillock I don't believe in the clamor of the masses for something that Isn't practical or possible, but I do believe in a public service corpora tion being reasonable with the masses and granting something that Is prac tical. The streetcar service in Port land is not practical or reasonable at present. Councilman Schmeer I don't believe in legislation that Is untair to com panies. If there is any way of regu lating public service corporations for the good of the people without inflict ing unreasonable or unbusinesslike conditions upon them I am in favor of it. W. D. Llndqulst If it Is within the power of the City Council to bring the Portland Railway, Light & Power Com pany to terms on the question of rea sonable service I think no action that may be taken can be too drastic Company to Blame, He Says. W-. E. Crockwell When a streetcar company tells us that If we don't like its service we can walk I think it is time we were taking hold of the reins ourselves. That is what the company has told us. That attitude was what caused that public demonstration at the last Council meeting. Councilman Jennings What I say is to be fair and reasonable with the company but let the plan be mutual be tween the city and the company. A. H. Kingly We who have to ride on the Fulton car have had our share of troubles with car service. For this we do not blame the car company ex clusively. We do blame the company for crowded cars, however. Councilman Monks We want better service. I have always been opposed to the company falling to consider the public needs for seats in car. The fall uro of the company to keep Its agree ment to run late cars on all lines was the direct cause of my Introducing the ordinance which passed last Wednes day requiring the company to maintain an owl service. GIRL MAKES PLEA Municipal Laundry, Not Dance hall, Needed, She Says. PRACTICAL IDEAS ARE GIVEN Young Woman 'Who Knows Ways of Cheap Lodging-Houses, Small Wages and loneliness Tells Better Uses for Money. SCHOOL FUND CASH GONE State Treasurer Sees Entire Clean Up by October 1. SALEM. Or.. Aug. 17. (Special.) Money in the school fund will be en tirely cleaned up by October 1, or the starting of a new quarter, according to a statement made by State Treas urer Kay. This has been a principle adopted by his office and the State Land Board since the new administration has been in power, he says, and as a result the state is realizing interest from the funds. During former periods the money which was lying idle In the school fund mounted to as high as I700.UOO at one time. In many cases drawing no Inter est whatever and in others drawing only 2 per cent from banks. Now the money is lent on first mort gage real property at the rate of 6 per cent, realizing large sums in Interest. CAHD OF THANKS. Mrs. R. T. Gove and family desire to express their thanks to the-r many friends for their kindness during the illness and death of husband and father, Isaac H. Gove. Stronger in its effect than any com plaint which has yet been made against the proposed erection cf a dance hall In Portland on the lines of the Seattle Dreamland pavilion. Is a letter sent to Mrs. Lola G. Baldwin, superintendent of the Municipal Department of Public Safety for Young Women, by a work ing girl who calls attention to the cry ing need for the erection of places In which girls employed in stores and business houses can do their washing and ironing and sewing. She claims that the municipal au thorities or any of the private indi viduals who have stated that their only Idea is to ameliorate the conditions of this class of worker can do far bet ter work along these lines than by the erection of dancing pavilions and other such places of amusement. Mrs. Baldwin forwarded the letter to The Morning Oregonlan along with an explanatory letter from herself. Both of these are printed: "Portland, Or., Aug. r5. (To the Editor.) I have received a letter from a working girl, who has suggested some excellent ideas brought to her mind by the controversy over establishing again a large dance hall in Portland. This letter calls attention to the fact that some of our business girls are more in need of necessities and some of the ordinary comforts than they are of means of recreation. Private Homes Open. "The Municipal Department of Public Safety for Young Women is ready to estab.lsh and carry out Bome of the practical things which are suggested by this girl's letter, as soon as the money can be provided. In a very small way we have been helping to furnish places where a girl might do her wash ing, and there have been private homes In this city open where working girls have gone in the evening to enjoy set tubs and electric irons in the basement, and the privilege was greatly appre ciated. It may seem a very small mat ter to the ordinary housewife or to the girl who lives at home and is accus tomed to all these conveniences, but to the girl who lives in one room, the fact of free hot water, soap and electricity has meant not only comfort, but a cer tain self-respect which comes from be ing well groomed. "If some way could be provided where by we could have a sewing-room with free machines I believe we cot'ld demonstrate that many a wage-earning girl would he glad to make use of them, as many girls prefer good ma terial and careful sewing to the cheap and oftentimes shoddy, ready-made gar ment, which is the only one her means will permit of her purchasing; and it would also be a safeguard against buy ing her clothes upon the Installment plan. "A woman s hotel or lodging-house ought to be established at once, and there is a splendid opportunity in Port land at this time for a project of this kind. We sincerely hope that this girl's let ter will reach the eyes of someone who nas not only the disposition but the means to Inaugurate some of these practical suggestions. MRS. LOLA G. BALDWIN, Superintendent Municipal Department of Public Safety for Young Women. Girl Cites Real Needs. The letter from the girl follows "My dear Mrs. Baldwin: "Though a comparative stranger in Portland I have been rather interested In the newspaper accounts that you, as the head of the Department of Public Safety for Girls,, are against a dance- hall proposition. "I wonder if you would care to know the ideas of one of the class of women the city wants to provide dancing places for? Personally, I don't dlsap prove of dancing; like It very much, In fact, but speaking from the viewpoint of a wage-earning girl (and wages of 110 a week), I think there are very many more opportunities at hand for the city or anyone Interested to make assured the safety of young girls In a city than dancehalls. "Why has no one suggested a munici pal laundry for working girls? The laundry bill of a girl who is at all par tlcuiar as to her appearance can't be cut down to much less than 80 cents and this Is exclusive of gauze under wear, stockings and handkerchiefs, which she can 'do' in the rooming house. Being clean gives a girl a feeling of "grit" to a large extent, and personally I know of no more severe strain on one's cheerful disposition than a pleasant Sunday spent indoors with the week's odds and ends of laundry strung on a pink string from the win dow casing to the closet door. Many girls, I'm sure, would appreciate a place where, for a. reasonable sum, they could have the use, some stated evening each week, of tubs with hot water, and an electric iron. "Better than dance halls, too, would be some attemut toward dormitories. The Y. W. C. A. has rooms for transient girls, but not nearly sufficient accom modations for the large number of girls who apply. True, they have a list of Investigated rooms, but one must walk and walk, and out of about 10 addresses visited two were vacant, one was im possible for a person of refinement to live In and would have driven a lonely or homesick girl Insane; at two, re peated rings at the bell brought no re sponse, some were filled up, and one took no women In only men. Glrls'Clnb Suggested. "Better than a dance hall, why can't the city take one good-sized room or hall, and by aid of a matron keep it 'clean,' where young people can get acquainted, through this matron, - and where admission can only be gained through membership, as to a club, after applicants are investigated. Any one wishing could send in books and maga zines, the city could Install a piano (preferably with a player attachment for tha sake of those who like good music), walking clubs could be organ lzed anything to relieve in some way the loneliness of those who have no home life and feel the heartbreaking need of "some one- to talk to," that eventually creates the state of affairs that makes the department you head a necessity. This is a long letter, but I hope it won't go into the basket until it has carried a few suggestions from a wo man who knows her sutject from the Inside, the practical side. Why can't the city have free, or even cheap, sew ing classes, or even have machines in a large room, where a girl can come in evenings, rent one, and make her own clothes? Why can't they have cooking classes not domestic science, with the intricacies of calorics, etc. Just plain cooking, such as the poorest "green horn" learns as soon as she gets to America? Couldn't they, if they had dormitories (or if they didn't), have a big rom with rows of gas plates as cooking schools have, each one with a J meter and a locker, where girls could get their light meals? "There seem to be so very many prac tical, humane ways that the city could look after the women within its gates that It seems too bad they should waste their time on dancing. Perhaps this letter has taken up valuable time, but if the knowledge of what one who has liwid for years in rooming-houses has as to the urgent needs of the average working woman, to keep her, in some decree, happy and safe, will help you or the girls a little bit In your problems, won't It be worth while? The city would be the gainer In the long run, I should think, for giving a girl an opportunity to live comfortably on her small salary will surely do her more moral good than giving her a dance hall, which calls for more clothes, later hours, excitement and doubtful com pany. "I am almost ashamed to sign this outburst, but it would lose its weight if anonymous, I suppose." (The signature was omitted by Mrs. Baldwin, who has preserved it for reference.) TELLS REMARKABLE STORY OF DISEASE CURE Tried for Years to Find Relief for Rheumatism Sulphurro Ends Every Ache and Pain. National Hotel, National, Nev. N. P. R. Hatch, Prop. C. M. C. Stewart Sulphur Co., 71 Columbia St., Seattle, Wash. Gentlemen: I have threatened to send you a testimonial for some time past, but It hardly seemed necessary, as every one who has used Sulphurro appears to be of the same opinion regarding Its merits. I had rheumatism in every Joint In my body tried all remedies rec ommended went to several hot springs, but only received partial relief. A friend from Seattle men tioned Sulphurro. I tried It and haven't had an ache or pain for two months, after using less than one il.00 bottle. Your booklet says it often cures other ails than the one you take it tor. In three days a catarrhal af fection of the throat of years' standing was relieved and is now almost cured. I cheerfully recommend Sulphur ro. You are at liberty to use any part of this letter you see fit. You may have noticed quite a demand for Sulphurro from Winnemucca and National. I bought the first two bottles and couldn't help but "boost." (Signed) N. P. R. HATCH. This Is a sample of the letters re ceived from all parts- of the country, testifying to Sulphurro's power in sub duing Rheumatism and blood, skin and stomach disorders. There Is no purify ing element which the 'system craves to a greater degree tnan Sulphur and this Sulphurro provides in a liquid form that is readily assimilated. The C. M. C. Stewart Sulphur Co., 71 Columbia street, Seattle, Wash., will be glad to mail you a free booklet. telling you all about the Sulphurro treatment, but you can get the same valuable little publication with a bottle of Sulphurro (60-cent and SI sizes) at all drug stores- Lawyer (to wife) Well, if you are determined to sue for divorce, at least let us keep down the expanse as much as possible. I will act as your coun sel. Life. Attend Rosenthal's great shoe sale. ROSE CITY PARK IS II Is 31 1.1 KUr:W r m Z !T ! : I"''-": S3 (v ii -, V&XjK&j-i 3SSL M , This beautiful, modern six-room house with every convenience desired by the housewife. Only $3,350 $350 Cash Lots oil Easy Terms Improvements in and paid for. SLAUSON-CRAIG COMPANY 304 Oak Street near 5th The Guaranteed FIou tgagaaafcj OCCIDENT bakes better bread and more loaves ' to the sack than any other flour. Try it. If you don't TOXJ pay more for is the most exacting and complete used A X OCCIDENT in any mill. tnan lor oroi- Bread ma(Je hom 0CCIDENT FIour nary iiuur, pui it s ;. . , i . . , far more economical in baking. - It goes further. It gives your bread more nutriment and strength and purity because made entirely of North Dakota Hard Spring Wheat. That's the most famous bread-making wheat In America. And the OCCIDENT milling process sweet. And OCCIDENT quality never changes. It is always the same First for Nutriment and First for Purity, Ask your grocer for one sack to try. In Every Sack Is Our Written Money-Back Guarantee. DIRECTIONS Work dough soft as possible; use less flour and mora liquid knead thoroughly, and let raise longer than with other flour. Russell-Miller Milling Co., 474 Glisan Street, Portland?