THE OREGON , SUNDAY ' JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY ; MORNING, MARCH 8, 1910,' ' ,,,..., . i ii - ." , . , . i ..... , , '-'(' 1 11 1 y " 11 " ) " rap fimOomtmM. - 111 ( '( . r t M', , i I I M, neath the ragged coat wtth nieo. n" ougm ...... uon.n ll : , t.i li 1 .;.',';' '.V-I ,x t :. V. y, ; ; ... S V I every movo of hla great, loafing '"'"'PW the fearless eyes I I , -J-J1 v j . -. . , ; ' .4. 1 HI bodv. Yellow hair like a llon'n llng ...it from th yellow hair, the I . ' ' 1 f -a i' 1 I : : i 5 I I ; - , Li MM - ? k i -n t ' w- I By Marhall X. Italia. VSCLKS llkaoUed stel rUyed he- ith the ragged coat with rery move of hfa great, loafing Yellow hair like a lion h manb awurvg againat hla ahould- r, crept Into his eyea, and hid hla fore head. The- month win unspeakably strong yea, brutal, and the Jaw below wii relenUena, atubbom, like that of a bull dog. Yet, surprising to find It ao, the nose wu classic In outline, the nos tril thin and quivering. In one of the employment offices north of Burnslde street I found htm. Ha aprawled over a bench,' taking room ' three men could have found comfort able, while other men looked respectfully on, keeping1 a distance and murmuring admiration. Somewhere within him was a mind as those quivering nostrils Indl eated. By the power of it, aa well as the power of his monstrous body he was their superior. Had It been when Vikings vandallied north seas lie would hare been their captain, their chief. But ow be waa one of them in an employ ment office, for the world has changed. As a clerk Industriously wrote on the blackboard the bids of buyers of brawn he lastly but with a look of admiration followed the workings of the busy, chalk smeared fingers. Once he turned and Staked a companion to read for him the latest offer. Seeking a story of employment oppor tunities and watching the operations of , tha employment offices, I looked upon a never diminishing army of seemingly laxy, shlftltss men. wandering almlessly from office to office, from opixirtnnlty to opportunity, apparently at the will of an employer's .caprice. Suddenly, the gtant rose to" tha full height of his seven feet. It was he algnal for all In the vicinity to stand aside. 8uch- Is the power that muscle has -where mtnrt dOPirwrt Interfere. With a movement cany, Ftrong, surprising, he walked down Fourth street I followed him. I learned some new things. As he went from one office to an other he asked briefly nnd with pur pose what work was being offered. From lime to time he shook hla head. He was wanted. The bulging muscles beneath the crumpled clothes, the foarlrss eyes looking out from the yellow hair, the great hands that could have swung equally n ax or a plik or pulled an oar, these were appraised shrewdly by the dealers In brute strength, and the best they had was his. But .he waji contemptuous of It all. 1 could see then -'that he was able to use the mind that was his. Though he may have been unskilled In the waya Of thought, he understood that now he was master; If employed, he became a .servant. All the aplendld power of his wonderful body would be come another man's property. Well and good, it was for him to sell, but he would sell to the highest bidder. 11 knew of the supremacy of his muscles and he was setting the price. He waa the Incarnation of the condi tion that lias come to be In this west where the employment problem Is gi gantic; where laborers dictate terms. Portland, the greatest labor market of the Pacific slope. Is railing to the world for men. And the world Is answering men who seek work are going to the with a heterogeneous assembly kn army dealers, ready to give up a dollar for recruited from all cations, which con- a .1ob-lf the Job suhs tbein. stllute's a big part of western develop- Portland is unique among all cities merit's foundation. In the method of getting Jobs for the drifting laborers. The employment of A Heterogeneous Crowd. fl-es like rival auction shops cluster on The light haired Norwegian mingles ''n,lr'h, ",r"t JuHt "1?!' f. Burn"ld" with the stolid tlerman; the effervescent n FJf.th T1 Bnd Thi etn,et th,f.re nre oilier oniees. mil mey seem into son of France with the humorless Brit ain. They have heard of Oregon's mighty, sky-towering trees, of Oregon's railroads In the building; of Oregon's Irrigation projects, .and . tby have brought their muscles, their bodies, to sell to the highest bidder. They come and go, ceaselessly. My giant was goon found by a timber operator who was wtlitrig to bid double the rrrloe for his thews and sinews that others were will ing to pay. I drifted on with the crowd. I found It true that whatever the free employ ment pleas may be, the big. army of stragglers. No matter what time of day or night It may be, this square is always crowded. Attraction, of course, centers around the nok offices and thetr ftamtng. bold announcements. But' between them nre the cheap poolrooms, the cheap bars, and overhead shabbj lace curtains drawn alluringly half aside from windows that display "Fur nished Rooms'' signs. The Ranting- Religionist. For every street fakir and Pandering preacher on this square there Is a crowd. Pastors of exclusive churches would looli with a degree of envy upon the attention accorded the street evan gelist whose grammar may be as glar ingly bad as his voice is strident One of these In particular Interested me. The leading feature of his face was the nose. At first sight his eyes seemed leaden, but now and again as I watched a furtive little twinkle appeared. From the extreme corner of his left eye to the hair on the opposite side of hie forehead, there was a long, livid scar, that In color Indicated his mental tem perature. When he spoke calmly the scar was yellow; when he became fran tic with appeal to theae wanderers not to wander longer, but to come within the fold, to -become as lambB and be no longer as goats, the scar was a vivid, flaming red. "I'll show you., A way, sure as .shoot-' Ing to get to heaven," he declaimed passionately. "I'll show you a way sure as shooting to get a Job; that's what you want more than heaven, right now," inter rupted an employment agent. At this tho preacher's fury rose. The scar seemed almost ready to burst into flame. "You are like the devil," he screamed hoarsely. Then to his audi tors, "listen not to him. Had you eyes like mine to see the unknown things you could see his cloven hoof, his waving tall, hts breath breathing out damnation from all the realms be low. He would tempt you with, prom ises of bread that you would find stones. He would promise to help you, when he means to help himself. He Is the dev il and he walks among you till the wrath from the ?fcy strikes h1rn down in his tracks." I looked for a fight or at best, an otner retort, but the employment agent only laughed sardonically and moved on down street where a fakir was pro- claiming to all who would listen, the against each other but without the aid values of a patent, white collar for of men of muscle thefr most daring men who never In their lives felt the projects never will be more than Imag oppresslon of such an Instrument of inlngs. These latter are derisive of torture. development's proportion. A constantly moving army answering the west's ap ServantS of Progress. Pa' for help; they come in their rags The omnipresent German band on the ,nf,,r indifference and they camp corner was playing the "Iast Rose of a 1,in, wi,l ln Portland, then are out Hummer." The rain drizzled down on forefront of the work, tho the street preacher the fakir and tho rr" servants or progress. men. On the surface It was a discour aged, ragged looking crowd. But here were the dealers in muscle and the. sup ply of all the iiorthwcst country. Look ing, I understood how James J. Hill could never have been known as the And it Is the most Important army in the world. Hypnotism as Medicine. From the Washington filar. "Do you think hypnotism has anv real Kmpire Builder without these and others valun In the practice of medicine?" like them, t'p on Deschutes river there asked the student. now would not be the excitement and "it might have." answered the pro struggle of rival lines racing to reacn fessor, "If its use could be ethically interior Oregon first, had It not been recognised. The only way to get lomi for these. people to pay their bills would be t Men of mind may play together and mesmerize them." STANDS THE CITY HALL By Miles Overholt. -ORTAND'S magnificent city hall. which, together with, the stte upon which It stands, costs $575, 000, and is now ln Us sixteenth ' year. It waa during the month of Feb ruary that the city officials removed from the old location at Second and Ash atreets to the new building, although It was practically completed before the first of the year. The late George P. Frank was mayor of the city, T. C. Malone was president -of-the city council and A. N. Gambell waa auditor and city clerk. The late Frank: Hacheney was city treasurer, R. R. Glltner was city attorney and the late B. M. Smith was municipal Judge. Although tho need of a new commo dious municipal building was felt for many years and agitated strongly by the progressive citizens, the conserva tive ones wanted to wait awhile. And It was not until 1S90 that the agitation of the progressive ones . brought fruit. Many sites for the pro . posed new building were offered and various were the prices and Induce ments. But the far sighted ones soon decided upon a location, and who Is there to say that they chose not Well! . The site that met with favor "was owne,d by the Episcopal diocese of Ore . g-on. Bishop B. AVIstar Morris, and negotiations were immediately entered Into for the, purchase of the block. A price of $100,000 was asked and paid for the property, then considered an extraor dinarily good price for property that "far ont." H. J. Hefty, a prominent architect, drew the plans for the building and the contract for Its construction waa let, but after the foundation had been built, at a cost of $75,000, the new city offi cials employed another architect and made many radical changes In the plans. These new plans were carried out. The accompanying picture shows the aite of the city hall as It appeared In 1867. It shows the residence of the late Thomas Fielding Scott, then bishop of the Episcopal diocese of Oregon. The adjoining building is St. Stephens' t chapel. With the proceeds from the sale of . the block now occupied by the city hall the Episcopal diocese built among other "structures St. Helen's hall, one of the most modern schools for girls on the Pacific coast. - The residence-of Bishop Scott was built by E. B. Comfort, one of Portland's earliest postmasters. The other house shown in the picture was the home of the late Captain Charles Holman. ' 1 r (7' r ' ! ; : - t 3 1 IN 'k ' f" k 1 j ,,kv fiLjuM. in. in. m StmmMua' 1 whom a very kindly remembrance Is still entertained. "Next week I hope to visit some points on the Columbia river, proceed to assist the New York grand Jury. His such unfortunates. Is first of all com- opinion Is that, of the most experienced pelled to work out her betrayer's sals and practical expert In the United price. So effective are the Influences s'ate. commonly wielded by the panders, that "There Is Just as much danger to she knows, perfectly -well that If. dis- Amerlcan girls In tiie wide ramlflca- gusted with her fate or overwhelmed tlons of white slavery," he says, "as by remorse, she were to attempt escape, there Is to the foreign women of any trumped-up charge, heartily sworn whose plight we have heard so frequent- to, can be relied on to send her to Jail, ly. Not a day goes but we are called making her a convict besides being mor- upon to rescue some American, girl or ally lost. lug as far as Astoria. Rev. Mr. Fackler women from the tolls ln which she has "Between cities there does exist a " 1 JUL '9-- is now on a visit to the ITmpqua valley and on his return I hope to receive some loose system of sale and exchange of a week has passed slnca 'the women. And a New York pander, K KJ -TT II till -to-"- . -.:s,: v.-. --v.. :- yr:.: ...... . m been meshed. "Less than very valuable Information In reference " "'"u upon m lypicai f, itmuimi iu nuiouaijiim n.i ...:i:i..n- to that part of tho field. Tnft ",rl "na1 D,"en waitress ln a neigh- lng Involved with the police, can often boring country town, working in the secure effective aid from, his former Early Land Laws hotel frequented by . transient sales- protectors. men. One of the men, whose stops wer "The sale and exenange system be- "A salutary change will no doubt numerous, paid her a beau's attention tween New York and Chicago between occur before long. I'p to the close of whenever he was ln the town, and at any two cities, ln fact Is practiced 18S0 each settler with a family was en- length, proposed marriage. She accom- more because the panders find that Is titled to a claim' of a whole section of Pan,'l ll,m to Philadelphia for the cere- the best way to baffle the searches of land" and each sinirle one to have half mony- "e tok her to a house where the anguished relatives than to provide thatrmuniuv H. k,f,H If th ruln WM accomplished; then he put the patrons of their dens with freshly la t'u . iLk JZh r VZZ S . n Iv h"r 0" t"" money for attractive faces.' Khta ri .r t i LfuT n,m' We fund her and saved her. "The tentacles of the whole, terrible rt frnn ,hl 1.. it "Th,e are veTy V 8uch ca9P8- vll reach far beyond the surface which sued from the general land office. Al- where Amerlcan lr arft the Vctlrns. .Ven a grand Jury Investigation can dig uu" " I Tl They are deceived into the belief mat over. They are like the unklllable poi not been issued and consequently the they are the wives of their betrayers, son Ivy. springing up afresh, however settling or me coun.ry oy tracts Jess wnQ fe, d,r)5 povmy and aB much cften cut. 0nly ln the m08t qonsclcn- a n' ,e a(l"l ' Preventea. as a by movlng them t0 fc pitlful ioyaUy Rs t0Us and persistent use of the ballot can large portion of the settlers came to the by threaU foro, (hem to tne 8treet- the community, aa a legal entity, exlir- country without means, they can make little improvement until they are en abled to do so by the sale of some por tion of 'their lands. -"The removal of this obstacle will consequently be a great advantage as This picture, reproduced by courtesy of the Oregon Historical Society, shows the residence of Bishop , Thomas Fielding Scott, with St. Stephens Chapel. south as Scottsburg, in the I'mpqua two lots for a church. The town has valley, but having been providentially been designated by the legislature as lake, soinn 30 miles southwest of this hindered from prosecuting this design, the seat of the university. I proceeded only as far as Corvallls "I also snent some davs. Including a who had formerlv heen connected with (Marysville). This is a promising Sunday, at Salem, where a subscription the church. The prospect Is fair for or into houses of ill fame. pate the evil, and every moral and rp- "Somo of these white slavers have as llglojis safeguard must contribute to many as half a dozen girla in different the cure. Eternal vigilance must be tha dens of vice, blackening their souls and price of our women's virtue, irremediably ruining their bodies In "I may add that practically no effi- order that .their Judas masters may live dent form of organisation for the sup- . . PPi'K i country mom at ase on tm, wages of their alns. preaslon of white slavery exists In the already occupied. By a recent decision young town, at the head of steamboat 1s going forward for the building of a establishing a congregation and building necessities of their past life, there Is a The danger of the shanghai, where 1,'nited States except the Law and Order fflrlfl An1 women'' Are dlmnlv rantlir.4 Sn.liilv tVillaAi.lrtMa - and that pnm. of the general land office, the titles to and Dy force an(j threa(a constrained pletely informed and ausolutely effective property In several of our principal to the life of shame, is a real and pres- organization is now. as It always has towns nave been thrown Into confusion nt horror Incident to our wMMnnuH Kr, ,.rinnifnri0n' rnH. t'nrvun I also visited the vicinity of Wapato and uncertainty. f,.)Qi (,. Rnt t Is mlv : n,, i . ,-. .i. ti,. I find the people for the most part ever terrifying. most .hideous form of vice, although at "Tha great and overshadowing evil no time supported In measure adequate lies In the demoralizing Influences of tn 1hA snnrmnna lailr Mnfrnntlnr It whatever Is proposed. From the. very th low dance halls, the chean theatres. "We hAve heen nhle to enose onlv place, where I found several families of a generally frank Hnd downright dls position, ready to consider and disciiBS navigation on the Willamette, and about church. I trust tho arrangements will a church at this point. It was In this great deal of ready wit and shrewdness, 00 miles south of this place. The pro- soon be completed prletor of the townslte kindly gave me commenced. and the building region that tha Revs. Messrs. Richmond as well as Indomitable energy. and Woodward mostly officiated, of "THOMAS F. SCOTT, Bishop." (Continued From the First Page of This Section.) the victim is kept within locked doors, or is allowed to go out under close watch, or kept hi submission through fear of personal violence, or even by the now universal moving- picture shows partially the iniquities of this horrible an4 more than any other single lnflu- trade In humanity. If some woman, or ence the saloon aide doors. There are some man. with a heart to el for the whole coterlee of young men who hang most miserable of our race and wealth around these cheap shows to scrape ac- sufficient to spare the means of salva- quaintance with the girls who seek there tlon from their plenty, would only put soma inexpensive relaxation from their at the society's disposal funds auffl- dsy'a work. Persuaded to accept liquors cient to carry on the campaign against - in tne 'laoies room or saioons, their vle as It should be prosecuted, the na- York. The route then passes through send a shudder through the soul of "Ask tha 'cadets.' One of bur ln- seduction Is accomplished by wholly tlon would not be merely astonished it Buffalo, Chicago, Omaha, Denver to every American: vestlgators found a cemetery on the premeditated plans, and the men fre- would be appalled at the revelations San Francisco, with branches to Phlla- "Rut are you sure that our American outskirts of a western city containing quently Induce them to adopt the life of which would ensue. Without such help, delphia and Pittsburg St. Louis and ,rls re sare.' listen: tne graves or 0l nameless girla. vice aa soon as tney teet virtue is lost; lo we can do no more, than attempt the res- THE NATION WIDE WAR ON WHITE SLAVERY "Not long ago three girls of good D. Clarence Glbbonev. as chamnion them forever. families, walking along the boardwalk for the Law and Order society In Phil- "Yet the majority of white slave of Atlantic City, were attracted by the adelphla, for many years n&aged a pure- cases, which practical observation re- American girls, are two well deflnad New Orleans, and north to Seattle. "Many Immigrant girls enter at Mont- that aense or shame wnicn prevents ner " ' n-ii, ""W" establishment of a fortune teller. They ly local but Incessant war on the illegal veals among from appealing to her relatives or Canadian border, the. length or whlcn entered, and soon found they were prls- sale of Intoxicants, on gambling In divided into cues we accomplish within our limited field." Concerning Bishop Scott. , Thomas Fielding Scott, whose memory Will ever remain bright in the hearts of .the people of Oregon, was consecrated bishop -of Oregon and Washington terri tories January 8, 1854, and worked ln this field for It; years. He died in New York city July U. 1867. A letter written by him to tlic1 home mission over a half century ao Is not without interest. A portion of it fol lows: . '."Portland. Oregon Territory. 2'Mli July, Rev. and Dear Brother By this mall I forward you copies of the Journal of our proceedings at a convoca tion of the church and laity held in this il on the 17th of June. The brief ad dress -Which whs read at that meeting will jtive you an outline of my journeys and )abOrs up to that date "It waa my purpe to go immediately after this meeting to the upper portion ff tha Willamette vallay, and as far friends, she is, under any of these con- prevents adequate watchfulness on the oners, being told In insolent terms that every form and on the more flagrant classes,; onions, a siave luiueu to uu ner mas ter's bidding and give to him the money fhe secures. "It Is difficult for the average citi zen to be made to comprehend the ex tent of this traffic and the complete ness of Its organization. Our researches lo not lead us to the belief that there is one great syndicate which, controls the traffic. It is, however, quite evi dent that each city has Its distributing those or young women part of government officials. they must stay. Two of them were features of the traffic ln women. He who are lured from their homes "Many Japanese and Chinese girls are timid and helpless, but the third, for- and the society, for long periods at a by offers of profitable employment and brought In along the Pacific coast and tunately, was equal to the emergency, time, amid utter apathy or active and those whose easy sympathies are 1 i .lavnu i i tlia ohnmlnahla '.ftt K T1 ii hv threats O tl d nniyn onnnnul tfia Criminal rntinlvflncA nrltli i.Ua ,. . V. n rflr tA tin n I n H una ttim l,,ln that exist in many cities on the Pacific escape of all. Had she not, there would part of the regular city authorities, re- treacherous lovers or, as sometimes malnlan1 a t.he southernmost part of atlves. ..". -" Railroad Betters Defense. The opening of the Japanese railroad that cuts through the steep hills of tha Yatake range and connects the prov inces of Hlgo and Satsuma completes a continuous eystfm between the north slope, some of these cribs being owned have been three more 'lost girls.' mained lone voices crying in the wilder- happens, to help relatives. center or centers, and that there is per- through the efforts of government offl fee t understanding between these cen ters in different cities, here and abroad. There Is no doubt that the e mployment agencies are often made use of to this end.'" In- JaiiiieM h;cs followed t lie trail of the social ice nnd its miserable vic tims across ttie country. The map shows it. but his words make it doubly impressive; "The traffic h;is of late grown to enormous proportion It is interna tional, interstate and local. Men and women visit Kinope. persuade gills to come to AmerlcH by offer of employ ment at large pay. only to immure them in dens of vice- -slaves. They enter cvur country at the chief ports on the Allan- Dy nnsiian men: " auumer instance a man seized a ness, unci again uecame iot and .Ills tn practice, mere seems to exist a "From New York and New Orleans young married lady on her arrival at a family In the Sodoms of Iniquity such chain of modem Legrees such as has girls are shipped to Panama. It Is fair railway station and attempted to drag as exist ln all great citjfs. been repeatedly declared to have a na to state here that the canal zone has ,lp'to a waiting carriage, claiming her It is a fact, significant of the vast tional scope. In Philadelphia, for ex been cleared of houses of prostitution to (be his Insane wife. What, woman or experience of President Glbboney, that ample, it has been proved that a group girlls safe from these slave traders? he is the author of the tremendously of dealers flourish returned to their dais. Dens or vice exist, however, klose -twten an attractive young man ap- errective phrase, "white slavery." He hunting grounds after having been by, under Panaman authority. pearl In a country town, scrapes ac- coined it over a score of years apo. and driven .out a few years ago who each "The money Interests of the traffic iitaiitance with a girl living there and, It has become now part of the world's own three or four houses. They are or are fabulous. Chinese girls of tender by offers .of securing her employment most active thought. ganized, with tbeir regular counsel, years are being sold for IJOOO on the or promise of marriage, or even a mar- It was Inevitable that any man who their ready bondsmen and tbeir influ Paciffc coast. Last fall, when Alphonse rlage ceremony, lures her away to a stood for genuine not Imitation moral- entlal politicians, all united for their aiid Eva Dufour, a French l.ian and den of vice. These facts must b; made '.v amid the moral ehao's and vacllla- protection against outraged law and all woman, were arrested in Chicago for known to people everywhere, for no one Hons incident ft) municipal politics must sharing their nefarious profits, importing white slaves, they forfeited is safe. sooner or later come into conflict with "To any one of these wholesale pand it bail of IG TiOO and escaped to France. "In Chicago a year or so ago one .of hydra-headed white slavery in its na- era the retail procurer domes who lias The prevalent hard times, by throwing these poor victims drowned herself In tional and international aspects. accomplished the moral ruin of a girl, many young men and women out of the lake. During the time allowed for President Gibboney has had so vast He lauds her attractions and aava h about 1750 ml Us. Japan can now as semble three divisions .of her armed forces at her southernmost point within 12 hours,, and treble that number with forcos from Tokyo witbjrf 48 hours. Aside from this strengthtng of nation al defense, the last link of the road will make a great advance in trans portation, thus adding to trade. and varied an experience that, when can persuade JNew ork first proposed Its probe into shameful life. work, favored the extension of he traf- the Identification of her recovered body fic. the daily papers reported that nearly "But it may be aaid that these are SOiV persons called foreign girls Immigrants. What of the body It?" girl. Fl i ne answer of tne cnairma-H -or tne ones were lost ai one time: Where ar ' ne unusual procedure was even moot her to embark on the He may secure a prlca Railroad for Australia. Reports have been compieteed and ara now before the house of representa-, lives of the Australian government for a. proposed transcontinental railroad t.hat will link up the eastern Australian states with the west. The great Island stretches a distance of 2600 miles east and! west, and a complete line of road. serosa would open a vast area of fine ons called to see If, perchance, the horrors of existing conditions, spe- ,for her as high as $100; ordinarily, he pastoral country, make available the might b that of their lost rial agents of the district attorney gets no more than $J5, witn individual military forces of the mor densely pou ve hundred people- whose d?ar called on him for advice and guidance, sales sometimes aa low as J2.S0. ulated states In case of need. anH tic coast, moM of Uiena landtag at New Nallsnai YifUance committee may well thej-7 The victim, onoe in the den and shorter, the time of, mails by seveial ed that he be engaged as an expert garbed in the garments commonly given days' time - 1