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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (May 11, 1913)
5 riTE SUNDAY GREG ONI AN, PORTLAND, MAY 11, 1913. watchenain of some one's glossy brown hair displayed across his waistcoat, was talking. "I hauled wheat there In the Fall of 4," he said. "That was about the first wheat on French Prairie, wasn't ltT" some one asked. "Oh; gee! no. They'd been raising wheat there for 10 years." "And have you been in Oregon ever since?" "Except two years when I was in the mines In Idaho; but I kept a shirt in Oregon all the while." "I don't see how people ever got across the plains in those days," his questioner went on. "No mystery about it. The finest trip In the world, sir, finest trip In the world. All it took was energy." And the hearty old pioneer looked as If he could do It all over again for pleasure tomorrow. 00-Tear-Old Mmm "Speaks." WIFE OF PROSECUTOR OF NEW YORK GRAFTERS FREQUENTLY THREATENED Notes From Husband's Foes' Do Not Interfere With Mrs. Whitman's Work for Suffrage Princess Demands Kisses of Strangers "Gerry" Farrar on Vacation Ramona Borden Glad to Return Home. NEW SOCIAL LABORATORIES TO TRY TO IMPROVE CONDITIONS OF POOR "Work of Research to Be Under Direction of Bailey Borritt John Delaney to Keep Watch Over New York Treasury Chief Rowe .to Continue "Golden Bole" at Cleveland. CP V. It was half past 11. The sun by I -v- if V VJ I r f (J NEW TORK. May 10. (Special.) Bailey B. Burrltt has been ap pointed director of the new so cial laboratories of the Association for Improving the Condition of the Poor. These laboratories have been made pos sible by a. gift of )SS0.000 from Mrs. A. A. Anderson. The work of the new de partment will be research, experiment al and demonstrative. Three special departments will be established at once. One will relate to public health and hygiene: one to matters per taining; to the welfare of school children, and the third to problems connected with the food supply of the city. This information, collected in New York, will be transmitted to other cities so that they may benefit by the work. Mr. Burrltt has had wide ex- perlence in the service of the Charity Organization Society with municipal courts, hospitals and almshouses. m Finding that the state's money was being wasted. Governor Sulzer decided to put a watch dog over It and he ap pointed John H. Delaney to be Com missioner of Economy and Efficiency of the State of New York. Mr. Delaney is a Brooklyn man.- -He will draw a salary of $12,000 a year for five years. - , William S. Rowe Is the successor of the "Golden Rule" Chief of Police of Cleveland. Chief Kohler was dismissed recently because of an entanglement with a married woman which brought a scandal on the police administration. Kohler was famous for making as few arrests as possible. Chief Rowe says the same ""Golden Rule" policy will hold under his administration and Mayor Baker backs him In this policy. Thomas U. Slsson. Representative In PnTiD-roR from MtsHisftlDni. recently de livered a "war speech" in the House in support of the California anti-Japanese land bills. I Henry James, the American writer who has resided in England for the last few years, recently celebrated his seventieth birthday. m XXT V Uant.nK.Pa An iltldHitBN l made such sensational allegations re i gardlng the conduct of the rubber ln ' dustry In Putumaye, that the British I pmr.rnm'nt Annofntnd a commission of i Inquiry which now is In session. DAY WITH A PASSING GENERATION IS VIVID PICTURE OF YEARS AGO On Way to Champoeg Celebration, Writer Listens and Looks and In So Doing Learns of Great Change That Time Has Wrought Since Oregon Decided to Become "American." BT ANNIE LAURIE MILLER. ON THE river bank at Wilsonville we were waiting for the boat. The saloonkeeper in the village had told us she was due at 10:30; two little girls, the only other Inhabitants we saw on the street, had said 11. and a gray haired lady, who showed us the path .round the barn lot to the landing, said 11:30. Waiting was not irksome, for the May sky was very bine above, fluffy Spring clouds were heaped on the horizon, hens cackled in the dis tance, frogs croaked, a kingfisher rat tled harshly down the river, chickadees called In the thicket and a. pine squirrel ran from limb to limb in a fir tree close by. Besides pioneers, seated on boulders on the slope, were talking, telling of what they did in '49 and '50, as we speak of what we did yesterday. "Do you recollect?" they began, and the stream of memory flowed as steadily onward as the green waters of the Willamette at our feet. Two ears were not enough to lend to the conversation; only bits of it could be heard. "Wal! there's been big changes in this country. I went all over it 50 years ago. I don't think with all the clearin- up theys as much open land as they used to be when I come here. Indians used to keep the.under brush burnt off." "I tell ye that was a fine wagon. We had three extry king pins along, all o' hickory, an' one king pin lasted all the way across the plains." "We left Missouri in May and got to Oregon the last of September." "You made It quick; we left in May and got here In December." "He made money in the mines after ward but all he had then was a cayuse pony worth about $40." "The Indians wasn't bad for stealln then; they'd rob a man of his clothes but they got bad after that, you betcha." "Now take that word Chemawa. There isn't a doubt in my mind that it came from Chetrawa. That'd be Chi nook for. new talk, and that's. what the Indians would call a place where th-Sy learned English in early days." "I used to ride over the South Salem hills and take my saddle off and stay all night never ask." Then our ears took in a more sus tained conversation. A hale, long bearded man, with an old-fashioned this time, had mounted so high that the trees of the opposite bank were re flected perfectly in the gently flowing river. The younger folk grew restless, and even the pioneers said: "This is getting tedious. Some one asked: "Can anybody sing?" and In reply "Un cle John," who was 90 the other day said: "I can't sing, but I can speak a piece," and he did. It was one of those pastoral. May-morning "pieces," with a ballad strain running through it, such as English poets wrote in the days of Queen Elizabeth. All conversation ceased, and we listened intently, for the verses suited the time and place, and we all knew how sweet a thing It was for a man of 90 years to have May day poetry stored in his heart. And as the old gentleman finished with the words: "A smiling morn, a blooming May, When lovely Jenny ran away With Jocky to the fair," the applause startled the squirrel up the fir tree. The river boats stop, they say, wherever a milk can Is set out on the bank, and It was high noon when the Pomona hove in sight, her decks crowded with excursionists bound for Champoeg. It had been pleasant on shore, but it was delightful aboard the boat. On the banks white dogwood flowers stood out against the fresh green of alders, balm and willow trees, and the dark evergreen of the firs; and, here and there, on knolls sloping to the river, stood houses of a bygone day, surrounded by tumble-down picket fences and blossoming fruit trees, gnarled and lichen-grown. Historic Sites Sigbted. The sight of one of these pioneer homes, a long, low structure with a chimney at either end, its mois-covered roof sagging with the weight of a great ivy vine, drew one old lady to the rail. "Oh! the thousands of times I've gone up and down that bank," she said. "I was only 3 weeks old when we came here to live. . It was a log house then: and now the Ivy Is break ing the roof of this one. Farther upstream Mr. Geer pointed out the place where his grandfather settled in '47. We realized then that we were taking a Journey along the highway of the pioneers, that the green river (Willamette comes from an In dian word meaning green water) was to them a flowing road along which they built their homes for safety and convenience. Not only were we seeing the home steads of a past day; we were also getting glimpses into the life of the past in what is left of the old-time river traffic. We landed at a road ana left some sacks of flour and sugar, much to the disturbance of a muskrat that swam downstream along the bank. By the time we were in midstream once more a stout youth was walking up the bank with a sack of flour un der each arm. We landed again for a party of people waiting on the shore. We stopped to let off a Chinaman with a curious assortment of baggage that included two salmon, their heads and talis showing, and a sealed bamboo basket written over with Oriental char acters. At the foot of a path we left a box of groceries and a milk can; at another, some bales of hay, a wooden bucket of dill pickles, and a barrel of lime. It occured to the pilot as we were putting off that the lime might burn in the wet sand, so the plank was put down again and two men rolled the barrel farther up the bank. Matthlen's Store Stands. ' At Butteville the old store and part of the warehouse of F. X. Matthieu are still standing. A woman pointed them out and said: "When I was a lit tle girl that store was a wonder of the world to me." Here much freight went ashore. Wheelbarrows were drawn up the incline by a wire rope and pulley worked by steam, with a man riding to unhook the cable, and a man hold ing the handles of the barrow. And, strangely enough, among the . roust abouts handling the cargo was a youth like a statue of some physically per fect Greek athlete come to life. His neck was like a column, the muscles of his powerful shoulders and waist played beneath his blue cotton shirt, and the cords on his bare arms stood out like ropes as he lightly did the work of two men and laughed with a gleam ot strong white teeth and a careless toss of his brown curls. A few boxes were landed, then kegs and kegs of beer, and one great hogshead of rye. Firewater-must flow in streams in that village on the river bank. Indeed some , ' .... . i Kippilliii' Kiijfflllllill nt"MMlW!!siMnir rr i Si. V 3 ." ." - ft mm kit ' Va "' n ftillllHtil .' N NEW TORK, May 10. (Special.) Mrs. Charles S. Whitman was the banner bearer for New Tork County in the suffrage parade May 3 in New York. She carried a purple, green and white silk banner. Mrs. Whitman Is the wife of the District Attorney of New York who is now prosecuting the four police inspectors charged with grafting. She has received many threatening letters because of her hus band's activities against the criminal members of the police force and one of them threatened the kidnaping or mur der of her child. - How would you like to have a Prin cess stop you on the highway and de mand a kiss? . It sounds like fiction, doesn't it? But that is Just what hap pens to a good many Roumanians at Bucharest. However, the Princess who takes these liberties with her grand father's subjects Is only a little girl the youngest of the daughters of the Crown Prince. Ileana is her name and she was born January 6, 1909. Her mother, who was Marie of Saxe Co burg and Gotha. Is a born flirt and Ileana comes by her coquettishness oy inheritance. When Ileana receives :he kisses she demands, she says: "I know why you kiss me. It is because I am so charming. Mother says so." "Gerry" Farrar has gone to Europe to sing a few times r.nd enjoy a well earned vacation after 24 weeks of hard work with the Metropolitan Opera Company. Miss Farrar created no new parts this season. But next year she is to sing In "Carmen," realizing a long-cherished ambition. Miss Farrar was accompanied on the voyage by her one wall father, "Old Sid" Farrar, known to American fans. Ramona Borden recently created a sensation by fleeing from the sem inary where she was a student and go ing to New York with friends. She became reconciled with her father, the milk manufacturer, after a few days' absence and was glad to go back home. . Mrs. Michael M. Van Buren Is a daughter of John D. Archbold, of Stan dard Oil. and will inherit a large part of his millions. She is the wife of M, M. Van Buren, a broker in Wall street. Mrs. Van Buren christened Mr. Arch hold's new yacht Vixen few days ago. Miss Mercedes Madero. sister of th slain ex-President of Mexico, was mar. rled recently to Senor Antonio G. Can ilzo In New Tork City. of the men lounging on the decaying wharf had complexions that spoke well for the speedy consumption of the con tents of kegs and hogshead. We were soon away from the drowsy town and out in the stream again, with the blue wooded hills ahead. Then we came to the landing place at Champoeg. A crowd of people stood on the grounds" above watching us and all the frecliled boys of the countryside, big and little,, were at the water's edge. Scene Harks Back. Except that automobiles outnum bered top buggies and farm wagons. the scene was Just such a scene as the sons and daughters of pioneers knew 40 and 60 years ago when they went to Fourth of July celebrations and the camp meetings that were of great so cial importance in those days. There was a bunting-draped stand where soda pop of every flavor and color could be bought; ' and hot coffee and bread and boiled ham and ice cream cones, and pink popcorn. There was man with those gorgeous balloons that cause great Joy while they last and great unhapplness when they sud denly and Inevitably explode, 'mere were in the outskirts games of chance; and somewhere the children got paper fans of colors warm enough to heat the surrounding atmosphere. Everybody ate a "basket dinner," and then the boys went to a baseball game in the next field. Tne people sat on rough benches un der the oak trees and faced a platform decorated with dogwood and flags and a large white pitcher and tumbler. How one would miss that white pitcher and tumbler if they were ever omitted! Being satisfied, however, that they they were there, one forgot them in looking at the group on the platform, that little remnant of a generation; and one rejoiced at seeing the fine, strong face of "Father" Matthieu, who alone is left of those who made the place historical. Then came speeches, and songs, by the veteran quartet, so patriotic that a Chinese pheasant in an adjoining thicket mis took himself for an American eagle and joined In repeatedly off the key, of course, since he was only recently naturalized and could boast no pioneer blood. Afterwards descendants of those who made history that day, 70 years ago, at Champoeg, mounted the platform. It was pleasant to see the strain of Indian blood in several; some way one felt that it made our title to the Ore gon land better. "America" had a rara ring to it sung then and there under the oak trees In the hj-lght May after noon. Too soon it was all over. The motors chugged away, the farmers hitched up and the boat carried us down the river in the gathering twi light. One picture on the downward trip lingers In my mind, that of a little girl, in a brtght red dress, seated in front of an old home, at the foot of a great maple tree, watching us go past. How often tle children of the pioneers must have waited like that on the banks of the Willamette to see the boats from the great outside world go by! When we reached picturesque Rock Island, where grain-laden flatboats coming down the river were wrecked in early days, the little red lantern lighthouses on the bank were lighted. Presently we saw ahead of us the high black funnels and white steam of the paper mills, and the foam of the Ore gon City falls; and at 8:30, with lights gleaming on every band, we came Into Portland. miiimwiwwbiwwsi icmiyiwwt iMi'nii .nmiipwy,M iiwaw ww wm hiujtwi mumming This is a most critical period of a woman's existence, and the anxiety felt by women as it draws near is not without reason. Fvpto woman who neglects the care of her health at this time invites disease and pain. When her system is in a deranged condition, or she is predisposed to apoplexy or congestion of any organ, the tendency is at this period likely rbecome active-and with I host of nervous irritations, make life a burden. At this time, also, cancers and tumors are more liable to form, and begin their destructive work. 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A HANDSOME REWARD WILL BE GIVEN ta.nwnerson who will Drove that any of our testimonial letters constantly being published in the daily newspapers are not genuine and truthful, or that 2J3 K wmerTwerTpald In anyV.y to give their testimonials or that the letters were published without their pension or that all the original letters did not come to us entirely unsolicited. THE LYDIA E. PINKHAM MEDICINE CO.. Lynn, Mass. I suffered for years while going through the Change of Life. I tried a local physician for a couple of years without any subsfcmbal benefit. Finally to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetaoie wmpouna, i quit my pnysiaaa auu wmmcuu ui""s, " " j . .T. . -W X n J TV y rZ:-v.- ... ., ir;n, othi to rrv vfttir rrt medicine, as I am fully persuaded that it will cure the ailments from