THE OREGON SUNDAY i JOURNAIi PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING. MAY 24. ,1908.
THAT STANFORD PARADE AND ITS
SUBSEQUENT CLASH OF FACTIONS
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-
Ilere'a Where the Keg Has a Decent Burial.
bloomed out Ilk muRhroom. full
grown In night,, but In many othar
event that occur1 only at nlyht. aome
or inoae meniionea in tne cast ara ami
dlnlly- wondering where - they - landed
wnen mo ciouaa rouea way. -
The demonstration of atudont .anrer
and the results that followed created a
tremendous uproar la the California
scnooL - Slno tnat time proreasor
Clark and Dr. Jordan -have adopted a
policy or tn severest repression. , .
XL N. Smith, the editor of tha eol
leva monthly, tha Stanford Beaaola. has
been told that he will not be allowed to
graduate; which la virtual suspension.
Decause or an eauoriai commsnt upon
lh action "of tha committee. Editors
Brunning and Hemllok f the Stanford
Quad, tha. annual yearbook, have been
sunponaea Because mey treated ma ex
pulsion ot the 41 students In cartoon
and verse In the "josh" section of the
book.. Tha art editor of the Quad. Vir
gil Billows, . a member of Proreasor
Clarke s own department, was called be
fore the autocrat or the student affairs
committee and asked If be had arty su
pervision over tha cartoons that ap
peared In the book. Me replied that he
had not. He waa asked If he exerted
anv Influence to keen the cartoons out
He -answered negatively, stating ha had
not even seen them. He was then told
that tha commltea could not find any
grounds upon which they could suspend
him, but that he (Clarke) would per
sonally take action on hia case by re-
ruslng to auow mm to graduate rrom
B tan ford next spring as a member of
tb art department.
Questions ax-Mayoi.
"Meaning whatT" asked the student of
the irate chairman or the committee and
former prohibition mayor of tha town
of Mayfleld. '
"That I don't believe Stanford has
any place for you, replied Clarke, and
In this way deprived his department of
on of the cleverest amateur artists
that Stanford's art department ever
boasted or. uut in. point or ract
Clarke's art department has never been
strong since he took charge of It, and
the university records show but a few
graduates in proportion to the college
class rolls. - .
The cartoons -: which. particularly
aroused Clark's anger - were those in
which his connection with the expulsion
of the 41 students was brought to the
front. They were all keenly ridiculous,
and had not Jordan and Clark been so
angered by the chilly manner In which
the entire student body had received
their prenunclamentoes, and their later
Stanford University, Palo Alto, Cal.,'
Slay 2S. Six hundred male undergrade
uatfs of the Stanford student body re
cently held a parade. Whan the smoke
settled and tha nolsof th conflict died
41 of the rank, file and officers of th
aforementioned pageant were observed
packing . their suitcases and. , silently
lipping away. . ? ... " , ,
It was a. momentous parade. Stanford
tad never had one Ilka it It can b
aid that Stanford .will not' have an
other like It for soma time. In point
of fact until the aching void created
Dj-mo rougn eruption or tnose 41 shin
ing lights in colleglata circles has been
j j " " ' f . uv-i u. v t .lira, imiin
there is neither th fear of the student
SifTairs .ommlttM nnr DavM Htrr inn.
dan, it Is extremely unlikely that an
other such parade will even be tenta-
men about the Cardinal school are pa
rade shy.-.' .... ... . .
; 'iri a Parad?
. A parade, declares Noah Webster in
his well known work on that subject and
some others, is "an exhibit of men
marching In a showy and ostentatious
manner." -Also, ' he asserts. It is "to
make a spectacle of oneself." The stu
dent affairs committee and Dr. David
BUrr Jordan accepted Noah's statement
In full and added soma for good meas
ure. All that Noah had said and all that
the committee and the1 honored presi
dent of the institution threw In to boot
did not make the next succeeding days
any pleasanter for the "six hundred."
Th committee had made a number of
very stringent rules concerning the ab
sorption of steam and the export beer
of commerce upon the territory locally
known as the Stanford farm. It was
Suttlng Into effect the theory of the closed
oor -with a resounding and emphatic
bang. It was not the anti-beer ordi
nance that the atudents objected to, but
it was the manner in which the door
was slammed that caused th campus
teapot tempest Some of the members
of the faculty, who are closely allied
with th state Anti-Saloon league and
other white ribbon and "Shasta-water-only.-please"
movements in the Golden
state, spoke largely of stemming the
"steam bear, wave at Stanford," but a
recent committee of investigation from
the San Francisco alumni body found
hat tha amount of liquor annually con
sumed on the Stanford campus would
not supply some very respectable Ban
Francisco clubs with refreshment for
a week.
Meaning Of iagrnlatltms.
Th regulations which the committee
promulgated virtually declared that
upoa a request from th committee
every student in the university could
be compelled to act aa a spy upon his
fellow students. Refusal to give up the
Information demanded could be made a
basis for dismissal from college. It
was this regulation, whiclt In effect sets
roommate to spying upon roommate and
fraternity brother to shsdowing f
ternity brother, that, caused the parade
PORTLAND . RAILWAY, LIGHT
J
& POWER COMPANY
Bulletin No. t Part 2
THE STREET RAILWAY AS A DEVELOPING AGENT.
In our last bulletin we discussed at some length the function a
street railway performs in developing the outljring sections and
suburbs of a city and dispersing the population over a wide area.
Today we will go into the subject more in detail and show just
what the street car service here has done toward decentralizing
' the population.
THE CONGESTED WARDS OF THE CITY.
Let us look at the growth of the congested wards in the city in
recent years and compare it with the growth of the outlying sec
i tions. Even a superficial glance will show that wards 1, 4 and 6,
covering respectively Willamette Heights, City Park and Portland
Heights, have had a far more rapid increase in population than
those lying, in the older sections of the city, while the wards on
: the cast side, particularly ward 8, show a wonderfully large increase
in population. Statistics show that the wards in the center of the
city in the congested districts have increased but very slightly in
the last five years, while the great growth has been in the above
mentioned outlying wards. This has been due unquestionably to
the constantly increased facilities for reaching the outlying sec
tions where there was ample room for the erection of beautiful
homes, which would have a commanding view of the river and
mountains, or as on the east side, where there was opportunity for
beautiful grounds and the growth of rosea and other flowers for
which the city is so well famed.
. A great increase in population like this could never have taken
place if every encouragement had not been given it by ample rapid
transit facilities. ':
While it is not the duty of a street railway company to build
unwisely and while it should be careful not to be misled by mere
land-booming schemes, we feel that we have been right in our
policy in leading in the development of the city by building lines
which may not pay for some years, but which will tend to develop
a particular section and should eventually yield the company a
return upon its investment.
PORTLAND. COMPARED WITH OTHER CITIES.
The character of your street railway service cannot be brought
home to you in a stronger or more forcible way than by a com
parison of our mileage with that of other cities proportioned to
the population. The following table compares Portland with
various other cities. Glasgow, Scotland, is selected because it is
so frequently pointed out by the advocates of municipal ownership
as the ideal city.
Portland . . . .
San Francisco
, Indianapolia t
Louisville
Oakland ..........
Rochester
Memphis ...
Glasgow
Population
. 175,000
342,000
219,000 .
;
186,000 ,
125,000
809,000
Miles of Population Miles Track
" Street Per Mile Per 1,000
-Railways of Track Population
126 1,389 J2
, 258 1,326 .75 x.
136 1,610 .62 .
150 1,506 .66
161 1.242 JB
159 1,170 .85
100 1,250 ' Jt '
135 5,992 J66
Look at Glasgow. It is pointed to with pride as the Onecn City
by the theoretical advocate of municipal ownership, and yet Glas
gow with, over seven times the population of Portland has but 7
per cent more trackage, while Portland has nearly seven times the
.trackage of Glasgow per 1,000 of population. Think of itl Suppose
the Portland Railway, Light ft Power Company should pull up
more than six sevenths of its track. How near to your homes
would the majority of you be able to ride in the evenings? How
quickly and conveniently would you be able to get from one sec'
tion of the city to another? And, on the other hand, wouldn't the
company cut down its operating expenses immensely? We do not
: think the American public would stand very long for Glasgow Or
'the Glasgow policy, v Vv P
Philadelphia, which has over 14 times the population of Port-
. land, has but one third the trackage per mile of population, while
New York. (Manhattan and Bronx), with nearly 21. times the;
population has about one fifth the trackage of Portland per 1,000 of
popuation.
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THESELPI GU RES SPEAKJOR..THEMS ELVES.:
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v Now Boys, Get. on the Water Wagon.
and resultant explosion from which th
university is still far from recovered. .
A parade at Stanford, among other
college customs, is a tradition sanctified
by a steady and unwavering observance
for the last decade of the university's
existence. It had been nursed into ex
istence by the pioneers at the new
school in the days when Archie Rice,
George McMillan, Chester Murphy and
Bill and Wallace Irwin were the big
smokes about Dr. Jordan's school, end
It has been cherished by the undergrad
uate body as the only proper method
and channel for united expression. Sev
eral were generally neid every year. On
was always held In th rail, when In
the simmering light of a full California
mooon hundreds of Stanford men, clad
in their pajamas, would do the serpen
tine in ghostly silence about the inner
quadrangle and Roble hall, the girls'
dormitory. Later in the autumn there
were the football parades, the Hal
loween parade and the parade that was
usually pulled off just after th fall
term examinations. Then they were
the Impromptu and suddenly conceived
parades, which arose out of any extraor
dinary situation In which student body
feeling was deeply moved.
The now near famous parade of the
800 was one of the latter variety. It'
gScued
Mini Lies in Cellar of Hotel
Four Days Unable to More
or Call for Aid.
(United Press Letted Wire.)
Ban Francisco, May 23. To lie for
days and nights partly asphyxiated by
gas, conscious yet unable to cry out for
assistance, was the harrowing experi
ence of Henry Cook, an employe of th
Hotel Atherton at 1661 Octavia street
Cook was found by another employe of
the hotel and removed to the central
emergency hospital, where it Is feared
he will die.
Cook gasped out his story on the op
erating table of the hospital while the
doctors were working over him.
. "I went down to the cellar Monday
ventng to fix a leaking gas pipe." he
said. "Ibe odor of gas waa very strong
in the smell basement but I paid no at
tention to It. thjnklng th feeling of
drowsiness which selsea me would wear
off In a few minutes. From that tlm
on I knew nothing. When I awoke I
was lying on the flat of my back. I
made several attempts to rise but each
time fell back exhausted. All th
strength seemed to have left my body.
It seemed days and days bafora lleht
came and when the first rays of light
came mrougn in oasement window I
was sure some one would find me In
the cellar From where I was lying 1
could see the sun as It raised higher and
higher, and later when It set I gave
up all hop of being saved and as night
drew on the pangs of thirst and hunger
in. Aim ana again i irtea to call
out, but not a word could I utter. How
many hours I remained I do not know
and until I awoke her on the table With
the doctors around m I did not know
whether it waa a week or a month."
Although Cook was missed by the ho
tel people It was thought ha was stay-Ins-
with friends and no particular at
tentlon was paid to his absence. :
7 Memorials Finished , '
.Promptly. : . -
Blaeslng Granite company. Third" and
Madison streets, have 300 monuments
and markers ready to letter, and a large
force of skilled workman. capable to
letter and erect your oralis In lima for
Memorial day v
attempts toward conciliation, both men
mentioned might have laughed at th
cartoons In concert with the balance of
th student world.
tings In Cartoon.
One exhibited President Jordan pat
ting Clarke, who was dressed In chil
dren's clothes, upon the head and say
ing: VWell done, faithful servant! Tou
have earned your $2,000 a year." The
particular sting in this cartoon was the
fact that it had been rumored that
Clarke was on the verge of being asked
to resign because of the lack or vital
ity from which the art department la
said to have suffered under his regime,
and that be only held his position be
cause he accepted the distasteful as
signment of tha chairmanship of the
student affairs committee after Profes
sor Durand resigned. The latter re
fused to continue in office rather than
attempt to carry out Jordan's policies.
Another cartoon was an excellent car
icature of Clarke, with the caption:
"This Is ndt a Dicture of Mr. A. MutL
but"
Amour others to fall within the scon
of the displeasure of Charlman Clark
and his committee was th president of
tha Stanford Temperance society, who
declared in an open letter which was
published In tha Ban Francisco papers
that the cause ot temperance In Stan
ford had received an almost Irreparable
Injury through the action of the committee.
Yes. they have. had a fine, large time
at Stanford during the last two months, i
The soft California air has been full of
atmosphere, and a lot of more combus
tible things. Dr. Jordan's difficulties
have not been centered alone on stem
mlng the "steam beer wave" of which
n is tne proud discoverer.
Xeslroatlons Kecalved.
Dr. Max Farrand and Professor J,
Payson Treat, two of the most popular
racuitv men at tne carainai scnooi,
hav both handed In their resignations
since the scholastic eruption began to
erupt, and there Is a rumor current that
there are to fce others, ur. Jordan, it
is said, does not welcome advice rrom
his faculty men which runs counter to
his own Ideas. Farrand will take th
chair or American history at Tale, and
Treat goes to a similar position at Har
vard, ut. jiarx, nead or in art de
partment and chairman of th student
arrears committee at Stanford, how
ever, will be working at tb same old
stana in tne ion a. low trunainr Demna
the Quad which goes by th nam of
me Biunio wnen tne iresnmen xnoca at
the office of the registrar next August
And it is a - good, safe wager, judging
from condition aa tfiev now exist., that
there won't be many parades next fall.
The Stanford man Is parade-shy. Just
now. , ...
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