THE OREGON DAILY JOUKNAt. .PORTLAND, ' TUESDAY EVENING. MARCH 8. IZZZ. AIL-FOR BELT LIHE AIM FEMININE "A brilliant Intellect In a alcklr body deeply like without paying tribute la like .gold-la - ipst - twinmtr't te trust pocket." . . " .BREATHING FOR BEAUTY. Committer of ' One Hundred Adopts .'Resolution.'. Ad HOME TRAINING. A good-slssd and very appreciative USE FRONT STREET AND - ", EXTEND LENGTH OF CITY McKennsrfuei That City Can A!- come Would Pay Interest on Bdnda ; and Eventually Ghre Revenue, j . ?. Disagreeing only en the wording f the resolution, ths-. recently appointed prinln-t "'""."t ft a mooting - la the city ball last svenlng. vted""al moot unanimously In favor of eonstruc- " 1 tlon. and operation' hs city bf 'a belt - line on Front atreet and asked the city ... council to take action to place the ques tion before the : voters of the, city, to Be decided at a special election. The 1 resolution as adopted t aa follower - ' "Resolved.- That the . honorable oily: council of the city ef Portland, Oregon, ' be. and hereby la. moat reepectfully r- T quested to specifically-eeciar y rui- - nance In accordance with section or ; the city charter, its determination that : the nubile Interest demanda the con- atructlon of a etandard-gaug belt -line LU atreet railway on hr weat aide of tbt Willamette river, and utilising rroo; atreet for-that purpose, to extend from i rha southern te i ha northern' line nf Bald -Jolty, and to publish said ordinance as .Upwards of SO persons were In st- Hendanee.lcludlflg ha mayor, coiinellfnA-rohaaaUoniJvary-Jnorn. ' companies contesting for. the great o sonJTtont .street The meet- i ins; was organised by the election o "Wants Nash ac:presldentr-an.d -Os- W. "Taylor as secretary. i , . Vavora tad.p.se Atm.'". Addresses t were made by Mr. Nash, " - president of the board of trade; F. X. IMcKenna. who is urging municipal .con- atruotlon of the belt Una and a system ( of connected boulevards on both sides i of the city; J. Whyte Evans, president ' of the. united Railways company; W, E. Thomas, attorney for the Willamette , i. Valley company; Thomaa McCusker and , others. '- - Mr. McKenn advocated Independent , action by the city, and avoidance of al I llances with any corporation exoeptlnt . In the ordinary course of traffic ar rangements after the line Is built He 2 aald tha lcltywss .finanrlallyln . good "condition to construct the line: that its -: legal right to-do so was beyond ques- i tlon;. that' th cltlsens could vote to . build and acquire any publla utility, and . that now was th time to establish a :- system of belt line transportation, i boulevards and bridge that would eon nect and beautify . the' city" and "' yield '' revenues that would pay all. interest and original cost and ultimately give , the city a net revenue to us for further Improvements, fie . aald . no franchise should be granted that would give any - company control of a Front street line. . ' ; s? v - riBf o Offer. r . "f T 'S:.'.. W, E. Thomas urged that the eltv conld afford to let the WlllametteVa:- ley company Mild lheIIne and then v make a present of th property to th municipality He said there were no - strlnss to th ompany's offer, and that -- it had- no intention of bottling up- the i south part of the city. , J. .Whyte Evans f declared his company Would flg-ht stren , uously against the city (ranting a fran - chts -to any-other-Tsompany.- and that : : his company was willing to accept mil- niclpal ownership rather than see the , franchise go to a rival. . .. v.... .. , Allegations were made by Mr. Evans, : and by Thomas McCusker, that th Southern Pacific company was bach of , i ths Willamette Valley company, and counter charges were made In a rood- a- n -a wain htf . sVaT T la is asj Thsisas bas . been talk -on the-etreete for-the ' last week .that both the United Rail ' ways company and the Willamette Val- v. ley company were under th earn In fluence, but no on of those who claim 'to hav knowledg of such connection ' has come forward with 'proof to ba k . the assertion. Officials of -'both com. panles have emphatically denied any connection with each other or with the southern, f aclllc. The meeting- got into a warm dlsous- slon of this question, and was brought " back to the business in hand by. mo ' tlon to adopt the above resolution. The ' meaaur passed with a standing vote. Fieeiied sTtoek Oaaaed Sntfla Allen gt Lewis' Best Brand.- If it'a a question between cer-:: tain snapes. let the ahape of ; your foot shape your, decision. .. . Favor your foot in preference 1 to, your pocket . . . ; Your feet will consider it a favor if they are allowed to bring yon her. , IWe .Have. thportland Afency a .l- For Men'g ROYArrBLUE $3.50 Shoes Every " Pair la Warranted to Oivt Satisfactory Wear. IflCIiaiOTHinjQ Gustufm-Pro ' ',: Outfitters to Men and Boyg 166 and 168 Third Street, , , I I Mohawk SansUng., sav .to be aald te make any Impres- ldMik 4ha breath - being Htov people would pains to breathe, there la no on vital thing- so wholly neglected ss this. . We can lire without food almost in definitely; .we. can live without water a much less tint; we can live -without. J breathing about one half minute. breath Is the life" Is something- more than Jlmatter of theory.. '' There are two ways of breathing- the mechanical, the automatic- way, which la 'taken care of by the subconscious mind and of -which we take no notice, unless It chances to be stopped in some way; and the . Intelligent, voluntary thing fnr m .par.t.1 purpn : The . Intelligent . breathing, properly understood . and faithfully practiced, contains almost unlimited possibilities for health and beauty and many writers affirm that you ean also breathe, your way to wealth and happiness. r - Now, it is.alwaya better to believe too much thaa toe little, ao w will just assume , that these last mentioned en thusiasts sr right and that will per haps help us to peraevsr after we have learned to breath ; Rlgbt here it may be a grod place to ask if you don't think that we women are rather lacking in persistence and the ability to stick to a food praotic through" thick and thin. -; .-- BUppos wa ars thoroughly convinced that to take, aay. five, full deep breaths or purr air-wnrcorrsspondingly-low Ing when we rise, how many of us wuuill pc ttiat habit Miitll began to t eel th beneficial .effects so s I strongly thai to orop tna practice r - One writer haa said waks up gradual, lv, and that la a good idea, as It saves th system - from th shock or passing from sound alssp to th state of being actively broad awake. Thta deep breathing; exercise is a good way of waking up In th morning and It is lust aa valuablelo help you te go to sleep at night : ' , ( ' . Perhaps you say you don't see ths us of troubling yourself about bresthlng when It will take oar of it self, and you hav ao many other things to think of. . Breathing- that fills every air cell of the lunga does three things that your ordinary -breathing never does. It tends to keep - the lung- -tissues throughout their entire length and breadth free from deposits that may later develop late sXiborcnlosia, , It cleanses th blood of -Impurities that the ' ordinary half breath will never reach. It gives ths Internal organs exercise which they re quire quite aa much as the muscles do, ss It acta as a sort of raassags and la ths only wsy posslbls to provide sxer- cls for these organs. - - - This, you will see, tends to remove any and all troubles of the Intestinal tract not only because of the exercise obtained from the deep breathing, but be cause It has purified the blood, which returns io Ins stomach pur oroua, capable of doing its proper work. Then there la another consideration that borders so closely on the spiritual side of life that we may very properly call breathing a spiritual exercise, an act of faith. Scientists have discovered that air that has been breathed over and-over Is 'very Injurious. They formerly be lieved that th poisoning quality of this stale air waa due to th presence of caroomo acia ns. , .v They now discover , thst while this gas Is, present in impure air ther Is a mysterious and ao far ungetatable sub stance to which this poisoning la due. They oanaot separate It. from the ether constituents of bad air and they only know It by Its effects.- . No doubt It will soma day be hunted down, analysed and named. Now In pure -air It Is supposed thst it Is the oxygen which has such a bene ficial effect on the blood and so on ths entire organism, and to. a large extent this Is true; but as In Impure air the in- trinslo Impurity evades ths chemist so In pur air there la something that builds and Inspires and upllfta that Is more than oxygen but .that also escapes scientific classification. - For thousands of yeara the adepts of Asia' hav known thla .and they name this fore "prana" and teach a great many . breathing .exercises by which It msy b stored up In the system just aa electricity is hsld in reserv In a stor age battery. - - . But for us busy women suppose ws take some full, deep, steady inhalations every morning with Just aa deep and steady exhalatlona, and then, whenever we step out Into. the open, draw deep breaths of ths fresh air down Into our lunga until deep breathing becomes a habit -- Ton Will not realise th value of this habit until you watch the feeble, quick. shallow breath that you ordinarily live on. "But what has all thla to do with beau ty - Our Ideals of health are ao miserably low that we have, th moat of us, no Idea of the beauty, th loy, the atrengtn, the sunshine that radiates -from a per fectly healthful woman. . What la beauty r - hBeautrla tt owncus tor betngT It Uvea always "in th ay or, th Be holder." '.''- . It la th fruit and flower of perfect health. What Is charm T ' ' Something to which, everybody bows and pays homags but it can no more be defined thaa that mystsrloua something In the air that gives us mental strength and spiritual Inspiration. But charm and perfect health of mind and body sr generally found together; and beauty (whatever form It take) la always- a:-eptrv bowed- - th -chariot wheel a of Charm! Oet an Ideal In your mind of what perfect healtHfeally ta -and then do thla little breathing StunrTalthfolry -tmr-tll you feel th effects of It and have no wish to abandon It ss an aid to ths realisation of your Ideal. ' . . By the way, a Portland woman, Elis abeth Towne, has written a bright little book on breathing, called "Just How to Wsks th Solar Plexus." . This book Is used as a text book by the teacher of physical culture In a very eelect girls' school nsar Boston.'"""".' -- It costs but a quarter and Is a good book t tls to. . . . "If health was a thing that money could buy. ' Th rich would all live and th poor , would all die." Dr. Logs"- Fortunately w can yet breathe as In the euy hall. t hear Mrs. J. jupapar on. -l?Ioro I fs-rnratlTna anilfln3'-'".'?'' Z-Ji" With Mrs. Ross wer ..lwo of . her nieces, dainty English maidens, who en tertained the gathering before th read tar of the paper. Miss Reld with, a vocal solo, "The Cradle- Bong. and Miss Jessie Keld with a violin solo, "The Clumber gong." -- - --- . The papers that have benTad be fore the association are so valuable they should b. printed, and circulated wher ever mothers are striving to bring up children wlsely-ud welt ' ' - Mrs.. Ross' paper war positively elec tric both in the vigor of its style and ths originality of its matter. It also sparkled with -wit and was re inforced with quotatlona from varloua "wrTumjrd sduuatuis. ' i - i It is a positive sorrow to ms that X cannot giv It all to th Cosy Corner, but it will be preserved in the library of th association and you can go ther for It and read It at your leisure, and 1 strongly advise that you do so. Later It should be printed in leaflet form for circulation. . 1. Tf nner war to-sum up ha-substano of this paper on ths car of th Infant it vonid d in in woras quiet, repose. simplicity. ' Mrs. Ross says: "From th first I am convinced that the child should hav vary few and very slmpls plaything. By a complexity the mind la confused. A high authority aaya 'the child's Intel lect Is ysry small and feeble, and by two many . toya a discontented spirit Is likely to be formed. 'Po not .entertain the baby whsn he Is happy,' was th oft-rspeated admonition in on home, where, as ! so-USUtrhS"ttndanta and eldere -wer not satisfied to 1st ths delicate gelatinous brain calls rest wlien 111! majesty the tiaby so slsstsd.- - "Much of th deslr to develop baby H thlgpoUTt comes, I bellev. from pur selfishness though. it is seldom so recognised. We really want the baby to entertain us and ao put him through new motions and subject him to new ex. parlance that we eaa-ee what Be will do. ----- ---- i. - -. .. "If our children are to be strong In body and mind th sensitive brain which reacta ao surely on the body should be most carefully safeguard ed from ... the beginning." . Mrs. Ross exhortation Is, bring them up like clams, or if that la too etrenu ous, bring them up like vegetablea for the first few years.V She also advocated veranda Ufa for the baby In preference to perambulator tide on the street where the little mind is constantly- distracted by confusing sights and sounds.-- Mrs. Ross writes of one baby who lived thla veranda Ufa but., who "waa put In his carriage on Bundaye to save his clothes; and notwithstanding this restraint ba would give a deep gargle of satisfaction aa he was rolled across th sHl and iherev he -would sit- by- the hour drinking In great draught of out doors and saturating his baby soul with the glory of the cloud-flecked sky this tlll-he waa ,1 yeara old." ; Then comes th stag of "overalls and bloomers" and a little later th in telligent blending of work and play that tralna little fingers and small brains to work In clever and happy unison, books long, until th child la at lsaat It rear old. , .. ' ........ Then he will enter school where his unlucky, fellows hav been telling and moiling since they wer , I and easily take his place at their aid te th course of a term or two. .. ... ' . DEBATING TEAMS ARE CHOSEN BY WASHINGTON ("pedal Dtapsteh te The Journal.) 'Seattle, Wastu, March s. Ths new debating system, first proposed by the University of Oregon, will b tried this year-for the Brat tlm by-h unlverel-1 ties of Oregon, Washington and Idaho. About 10 students entered th prelim inary teats at Waahlngto university. Tbs team had been chosen to meet the Pacific university team at Forest Orove, which is cem posed of Clarence Martin, Victor Zednlck and W. O. Trumbull. . Floyd Hatfield. Miss Hayes and Charles Hall are th debaters chosen to meet Oregon university in Seattle. The learn which will meet Idaho at Moscow is composed of F. W. Campbell, Stanley Griffiths and Ingram Hughes. Ths University of Washington will hav stenogrsphlo reports made of the debate at each college. These will be transcribed, printed end bound for ths university library. WANT MATERIAL TO T : MAKE NICKELS FROM . (Journal geeeiel service.) Washington, D. C, March (.Material out of which tb manufacture T, 880.000 nickel i cent pieces has been advertised for by the United State mint at Phila delphia. The demand for the email coins Is so great 'that it keep that de partment busy to supply it It will re quire (0,000 pounds of copper and 10,000 pounds of nickel to make the colna. The face value of th coins will be 1184,000, many times ths valus of the erud ma terial of which they ars made. USE THE BITTERS Cxclu4lvcly- Wae th stomach Is weak, appetite poor, liver Inactive, kldnsya disordered or sleep restless and you adopt ths quickest and surest method of curing such ailments. ; , . t Hostetters Stomach Bitter; n a been- w- Yavor- ite remedy In th ujanda of - te aa yte, which STOMAtfn ought to prove its merit ana reliabil ity. It always cures siox. luiuon OTJB migXaTOMs, OOSTTTXnSg, VAVSSA, ' CsVaJCPg, mzaBtmov, room f e- . j. Vj I BTeTOrgXA, twaxm sua, '. COLD or OBzrra. -Try a bovtl a, aay and-see -for yourself. Avoid substitutes. ' -(.- '' V,'' II t-. ,7 v Slllliiiiiilll lllllilllllllWMlJSn,,,,-,! f . t. , , ""iiiiiHl'liiil'lliiillllllll 111111 1 II I 1 '-S " . - V:. I . i Alt Id kiy - Exactly like cut; '-is X''''-; '.,;. : :-"'' ' .'' -s vi IK It is made with oak frame, claw foot, roir edge, covered in pretty figured velours. The springs are oil tempered and will wear.' for years. This .l:;,.. - " " is a $14.00 value. - 'v.;';.. , -hirr11 --- First and I jfTR) (0) W E I Dignified Taylor Sts. CredifforAII UNITED WORKMEN ARE FACING FINANCIAL CRISIS 1mvu1 flneel.l Bervleft. Syracuse, N. T.. March I. In order to.conatder the financial eondttlon of the order In thla .state and possibly a nhtelnlna- financial relief from the suorsma -lodga the New Tork grand 4 odg-of,.th-JucJent OrdeT or unitea Workmen today began a apectai session In this city. Th flnancea of th stats organisation are aald to be In a critical condition, ther being a surplus of but 110,000 against beneficiary claims ag gregating $700,440. According to claims of th officers, ths grand lodge of the stats of New Tork Is entitled to flnan- iclal assistance from th supreme lodge to the extent of upward of lOQO.OOO under the rules of th order. . ' Oaiapalga for Oeagres. -. 1 . . (Jeoraal gpeelaf BeTTtee.i ' Washington, D. C March . -COBSld arable - Infreat la manifested . . lnth meeting of the democratlo congressional committee called for thla avsnlng in ths minority committee room ef the house of rrpreaentatlvea. It ta stated that ths meeting is called for th purpose of or ganisation, birt the details of th cam paign for ths Sixtieth congress may re ceive immediate attention. . ... URIC ACID AND GRAVEL are eaaaoe by the KMseye bring anaMe te pms erly liter the Imparities frost Uie blood. Irv ine's Burks Wafrre are 4be only anre naMMlr for tbi eoaalltloei ther eleanM tbe kids?, from all wors-nat m.trrl.l, bulla ap the hrankea wills of the Kldners and Drevent tke forejatioa ef the Url Acts, sol at 0e a boi e U. UkMmvf tt Oe Ururrurea, IB bird st, sola ageata for rerUaad, 0. : fv ' v,f , ; ...',. $1 Dovn; 75c a Week has 45-inch top seasoned stock iuid finished golderi of weather 4 REAL 6QLD MINE IS FOUND UNDER HEW YORK CITY Ground Nea Wall Street Found to Be Rich in Mineral ; Value. ' ' (Jesraal gpartal serrtee.) New Tork, March . A real gold mine whose quarts aasaya vary high haa b discovered on lower Broadway, within a stons'g throw of Wall atreet ' The "ptrlka". wsg.nisde .174 feet jnder the street level under a handsome new building being erected for th Title Guarantee Trust company at 170 To equip ths building with plunger elevators, four holes, ' each about nine Inches inaiamtf,-wer dnnT. ' At a depth of 1T4 feat Samuel C Pyle of Wilmington, Delaware, who besides be ing foreman ef the bricklayers, la a mechanic mineralogist, geologist and metallurgist, noticed stray bits ef stone brought up from the plunger holes and pocketed several pieces. He took them home and worked th specimens until ha had g alee little lump of pure gold. Bine then Pyle has assayed similar samples of the or found la th same borings under Broadway' and a thst In some ef them the gold runs a high a It, 000 a ton. The immediate surface value of the realty I, thereabout pre cludes the possibility of a gold eras following the etriha, aiid 6-inci ; legs, jbuiltL of ..thoroughly. as $1 Down; 50c aVJeek PS When you open a pack age of Unccda biscuit it's like opening the oven door and taking them out crisp, fresh, and clean. ' Onccda Biscuit are "the Crackers." tot5e ckers M after a f ev hours exposure to the air. Open a package of Unccda Cbcuit today.v ' lWrOKALlC0rTrC0MArfir 13 t ' & Z ri V-y ' TT only Soda Others cease- 'lire t V