1 gender PART TWO Stirring History of Milwaukee One of Much Progress Tale of How Great Railroad! Pushed . into the Far 'WestIs Interesting Its Aims and. Purposes the Developing of New Territory (By Edmund Ellsworth Sumner.) HERE'S to the Greater Milwau kee! was the terse sentiment expressed in a toast offered by the president of the Chi ago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway at a recent banquet given in Chicago to the officials of that system. It was brief and to the point. No words could have been uttered to more aptly illutsrate the keynote of the addresses f the evening, the history, growth and development of the big system com bined with the bright outlook and im portant plans for the future. And thu tffieial who offered the toast, A. J. Earling, the man who has little to say .but who does things, concisely stated the case and echoed the thought now prevalent in the mind of the public that the Milwaukee is among the lead ars in the list of important transporta tion companies and first among West ern railroads with far-reaching plans for future expansion to meet the re quirements sure to come, incidental to the industrial development and the gen eral prosperity of the country at the present time. And so it comes that the same senti ment can here be made the motif of a story of achievement, a new chapter in the stirring history of American trans portation, a recital that not only deals with the future up-building of the Pa cific Northwest, but one that links the East and- the West; that brings to gether the Occident and the Orient. This is not In any sense a historical review of the Milwaukee, but in passing it might be interesting to note that in the early sixties the road was incor porated in Wisconsin to build a local line connecting several of the then im portant towns in the Badger State. Lo cal development was the watchword and ever since the closest attention has been given to local branches that brought the products and people of the outlying farms, mining towns and set tlements nearer to the main line. As a local company it took its name from the places it aimed to reach and so Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul have been perpetuated for all ' time in a 10,000-mile system that reaches Ho- quiam, Spokane, Seattle, Tacoma, the Canadian boundary and a hundred other points; that penetrates the iron ore region of Duluth, the copper dis- ' tricts of Calumet, that connects with Postage-Shy Notes Bother Postal Official Tells Public What Stamps to Use on Letters to Go Over Seas So much inconvenience is causod to postoffice officials and the patrons of the postal service by the large number of letters mailed to foroign countries without sufficient postage, that Second Assistant Postmaster General Joseph Stewart has Kent out a letter of in- biuciiou iu regard to the amount of postage ueces.iTv on letters that are to travel to "foreign parts." The let ter follows: The department is in formed that many letters mailed in the United States, addressed for delivery in foreign countries, which are subjoct to our postal union pastage rates, are prepaid only two cents, the senders of such letters being under the impres sion, it is presumed, that our two-cent domestic postage rate is applicable to said letters. The only foreign destina tions to which our two-cent letter rate applies are Canada, Cuba, Mexico, the Republic of Pannma, Newfoundland, the Canal Zone, Germany (by direct steamers only), England, Scotland, Wales and . Ireland and the City of Shanghai, China. To all other places the rate is five cents for the first ounce or fraction of an ounce and three cents for each additional ounce or fraction of an ounce, which must be fully pre. paid or the letters become liable on delivery to a charge equal to double the amount of the deficient postage. For instance, a single-rate lottor pro- pa. 1 only two cents would be short paid three rents, and, consequently, subject on delivery to an additional postage charge of six cents. TOLEDO, Story of the California lines at Kansas City, Omaha or Sioux City, that gridirons the states of Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota and the Dakotas and lastly, through the completion of its Puget Sound sys tern, has built up a through line from Chicago and that whole territory to thu greatest harbors of the Pacific, those of Pugot Sound. To reach this section the line traverses a country rich in vast industrial opportunity, but merely at the beginning of its development. Ihe building of the line to various ports of Puget Sound was but the first step in the giant plans of this railroad. No sooner had the sound of the driving of the last Bpike died away in the echoes of the pine-clad hills of the Sound when steps were taken to build up the local territory branch out into new fields and today, this, the newest of all the transcontinental lines, has, even at this early date, completed more local feeders than have other and older lines existing in the Pacific North west. The Milwaukee is aggressive as well as progressive. No sooner had the line been thrown open for traffic than its management looked far beyond the breakers of the broad Pacific. To the far north lay Alaska, the world's treas ure house. It had been known for years, but the Milwaukee rediscovered it and sent its agents into the far in terior, opening offices and getting ac quainted with the minerB, the sealers, the salmon fishermen and the people generally. A few weeks after the line was opened it transported the first train of high grade copper ore from Alaska "to the Atlantic seaboard and this was followed by shipments by car loads of those remarkable blue foxes to the fox breeding farms of Nova Scotia. They looked to the Orient and long before the road was completed had plans for a direct line of ships. It was the newest road, but it is to date tho only transcontinental American line that has adopted a through export rate from the Far East and intermediate points to ports of Japan and China. It opened an Oriental agency and placed at the head a capable young man to properly manage that department.. What is the result of all these moves! Puss ing through this Bplendid inland harbor of Puget Sound, the gateway to the whole Pacific, are vast cargoes of freight gathered along the line of tho railway and destined for distant Pa cific ports of this and foreign coun tries. This trade is but yet in its in fancy, although the beginning has been noticeably successful and indicates what a great tonnage will be built up in the future. All the ports of Puget fc -and on 'Your way to Pfc FRISCO DONT FAIL TO VISIT SSJfi E CUNTRY WHERE THE vtr ' 4n Soil spells success, and rga V "5s vj, SSjL 'YOUR. NEIGHBORS HANDSHAKE pf iW STQP ANDV,S'T us! LINCOLN COUNTY, OREGON, Achievement in A Life-Saving Crew at Practice Caught Men and apparatus combine to protect life and property off the Western coast. The above picture shows a company of these fighters of the storm in a sham battle, that they may be reaay when the test by wind and wave comes. Sound are vitally interested as from one or the other of them this volume of trade -patsen directly over its wharves into the doep-water shipping. What will be the ultimate result and how greatly each Puget Sound port will be aided can be readily judged. What the road is doing for all the ports it reaches on Puget Sound is too well known to need more than a brief resume. In tltis locality it has plans for greatly widening its scope. Here are the headquarters of the Western or Puget Sound lines; here in this state already 'are radiating numberless feed ers and all through freights passing into the ships at the gateway to the Pacific pay tribute to the several ports; help to build them up und increase their population and commercial impor tance. It is the newest line to the Puget Sound country, but already the work has been well started on the $1,000,000 tunnel in the Cascades. It will reduco the grade to a maximum of one per cent and save nine miles over the sum mit. More important still, it will elim inate most of the snow troubles that have caused such delay and expense in Enjoy the Exposition, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1013. mmmMgmmmmmmi - ,,,,, gT i, -JS M MS 7 iS M ills!!:! operating trains over this range of pic turesque Bcenery but deep winter snows. It is building into Spokane and pre paring to erect there a palatial term! nal station. It has plans for widely extending its local lines in Western Washington and electrifying many of these lines. At the City of Butto, tho center of the smelting, copper and zinc mining, it is building up its local sys torn and joining with the people of that important center in all that pertains to Butte's betterment. At Great Tails, in the same state, it is likewise giving much attention to local improvements. Here is a water power that in time will be valuable to tho future electrifying of the lines and the Milwaukee is keeping pace with tho local improve incuts by joining in all now enter prises that make for the advancement of local conditions. The same is true of other placeB along the wholo route. In Western Washington it has been busy from the day tho last rail was laid on the main line. It bought the Tacoma Eastern, 67 miles, and leading to the main entrance to the wonderful Mt. Rainier National Park; it pur But Don't Forget Us New Steel Trail by the Camera i i J1 chased the liollingham Bay & British Columbia, 45 miles in length through tho fertilo Nooksnek Valley to the Ca nadian boundary on tho north; in rou struction it has built from Cedar Falls to Enumclaw, Beverley to llnnford, Warden to MarcelliiB, Tiff lis to Neppel, Cedar Falls to. Everett, Tacoma to Ab erdeen and Hoquinm, a grand total of 242 miles; it has established ear barges on Puget Sound between Kenttlo nnd Bellingham, Scuttle und Ballnrd feattlo and Port Blakely, Senttlo nnd Kuglu Harbor; it has built important terminal facilities at Tacoma, Seattle and other ports. . Still aggressively inarching onward, current reports indicate that it will build a line through tho very heart of the Olympic peninsula, tho richest tint ber district of the Northwest. It nl ready skirts tho southern end of that body of land, but the completion of tho new lines will bo tho factor in develop ing tho northern ami central portion. This ono plan alone will menu every thing to this rich country and ndd to the commercial importance of tho cities of the Sound. (Continued on page two) FOUR PAGES Men Who Aid City's Papers Metropolitan Publications Trust Correspondents in Rural Districts IT WAS Joe McCullough, the famous managing editor of a great East ern daily, who said: "A good edi tor ulwaya has a man on the spot when hell breaks looso." Joe McCul lough has been dead for more than a decado, but hiB advice has been fol lowed by managing editors all over the United States. In fact, his advice has been construed as meaning the having a man in every spot where anythiug might happen by any possibility. Tho result has been the small town corre spondent. He is an important but in conspicuous cog in the vast and som plieutcd machinery necessary to the production of the metropolitan paper of today. Columns have been filled . with .tho records of famous "beats' scored by clever reporters on big dai lies, and there has never been any luck of exploitation of the feats performed in "landing" stories of thrilling inter est to thousands. No doubt many of these tributes to genius and enterprise were deserved. No one, howover, has ever spoken a word of commendation for that great army of humidor news paper men, who, situated in districts outlying the cities, represent the larger paper, each in his individual . terri tory. As essential to the city paper ns its trained editors and reporters are the country correspondents. The man aging editors of these papers, if no ono else, appreciate tho value of tho out-of-town representatives, and thoy pay nl. most as much attention to the effective ness of their corps of men in the "country" as they do to the men nnd women in the home offices. . Thoy-are quick to detect any signs of unrelia bility or inefficiency, nnd are not slow in making a change if there be reason for it. They realize tho fact that it is the unexpected that is always happen ing and that tho unexpected picks out-of-the-way places to happen in ns often as anywhere else. It is important to managing editors thnt there bo no weak link in the chain of correspondents who serve in the rural districts. For this reason no time is lost in replacing an incompetent, unreliable or careless cor respondent with ono who approaches tho standard thought necessary. Ordinnrily one correspondent is ap pointed in each county of tho stato im mediately adjacent to tho city where the paper is locnted. The correspond ent is required to handle nil news in his county nnd, in enso an adjoining county innv .'live doubtful rcpresen ttttivo, tn 'io'i nis paper of any im portant iiaiui -ii'ngs in order that all secti"! - innv i. "covered." Tho corr.", .inden , besides taking care of his own territory, is also aide to "tip off" big news events in contigu ous territory, conies closest to highest esteem possibly for the mannging edi tor to bestow. While it is rare for a llvo correspondent to recoivo a bit of credit or a word of praise, as happens occasionally to the city staff man, yet ho knows from the fact that his "story" is given liberal space and thnt he is well paid for it that he is not altogether forgotten or entirely un appreciated. The mere fact that he Is not "fired" shows that ho is "making good." Tho country correspondent is usuully invariably, almost a reporter on the leading newspaper of the principal city of his county. Whilo some of the big papers acquiesce in tho employment of a correspondent who has retired from the newspaper field and yet keeps lri touch with tho news enough to serve his paper well, yet the majority insist thnt a correspondent be actively con nected with a daily newspaper. The evening pnpors of tho cities naturally profor that thoir representatives bo omployod on the evening papers of their respective towns, while the morning daily papers desiro thoir correspondents on the morning sheets of "down state." The reason is very plain. A representative of a metro politan evening sheet employed by a morning paper in his home town cannot give thorough attention to the morning news for the renson that hit night work prevents him from reaching his . desk ns early in the dny as the report ers of the evening papers do. On the ' other hand, the men employed on the afternoon papers are apt to miss impor tant happonings late at night, "stuff" that would have been handled by the men of the morning papers. In the smaller counties whore big event are few and good correspondents rare, the big papers must take the best they can get and risk getting "scooped" on big (Continued on page"two) TP