SI 13 .THE j OREGON", DAILY,. JOURNAL, .PORTLAND; MONDAY-, EVENING, NOV1SMI31SK - 3, l'Jlfc L1II SUGGESTS MARYHILL ROAD TRAVERSES HILLS AT , EASY GRADES AND CORVES RICH POSSIBILITIES li OWfiOL What One Man Has Done in "Developing Natural Re sources Others Can Do. 'CjA'",;'., By Fred liockley. JUtYHILL Is on the north bank ItI ot the Columbia, 114 miles from m Portland. Samuel Hill, tin owner of Maryhlll, has bought " j, ., 6000 acres of land there, and Is doing valuable work In demonstrating aihii be done by sclentifio treat ' ment of the soil. "I located this place On Uie "jap Heiuro i CVOI oan iv, . Mr. Hill. r wanted to find a point midway , between 'the rains of the coast and the almost constant sunshine of eastern Oregon, a point where the rain and the sunshine meet, in aaamon 10 mis i wanted to . find a point on the river where the air drainage was perfect and where I could have a view of the scenic " beauty of the Columbia river. i "Step out here in front of the office, ' never mind your hat, I , want you to be bareheaded so you' will notice some- thing unusual." . , - We stepped out into the brilliant sun ' shine and to my surprise 1 felt a fine mist strike my face. ' i "Look to" the eastward;" said Mr. H1U. "Did you ever see a more beau tiful rainbow. Now turn to the west ward and aee Mount Hood and the Co lumbia" The seven hued arch with its brilliant colors' resting on the hills; Mount Hood - shimmering like new ' coined silver in the early morning sun shine, the Columbia at our feet sweep ing la graceful curves to the sea, made "a vision of beauty .worth coming far ' to see. ' "When I was a boy I used to notice that when the kitchen door was opened on a cool day the steam would rush out of the kitchen Into the colder air. You , can see here the steam or moisture rushes up the 'Columbia In the same way. '. , Tha ' warm moisture-laden air k sweeps up the river and strikes Mary- bill, Jiie wind, chlnook-like In Its mild ness; -continues up . the Columbia and , we have s. a result the Kennewick, Yakima and Wenatchee fruit districts." improved Highways as Feeders. After-breakfast we drove all ever the ,' Maryhlll district "1 put In a big res ervoir intending to operate an electric rarline'from 'Maryhlll .to Goldendale," said - Mrr Hilt found by building ' hard surfaced roads motor trucks could , be operated more cheaply than electric cars.. The time la coming when railroad men will do everything in their power to encourage the building of permanent and durable roads to1 serve as feeders to the, main 'artery,- the transcontinental road. Many of them do not yet aee what It' means In Increased trafle to ' them to have ' well built highways. Whether they like it or not the logic of the situation demands that we have s good roads leading to nature's great highway, ' the Columbia .river, which will always serve as an equaliser and rate adjuster. To get the people on the land you ; must be able to get their . products to the consumer and the rail roads, the river and the motor truck all have their places In the scheme ot distribution." Past well kept young orchards we drove to Maryland, the home place. - Here a quiet but wonderfully efficient 1 Scotch gardener- la raising more than than the colloquial 67 varieties. We went out With him through bis gardens and fields and saw what skill added to good soil, and water can do. Peanuts, sweet potatoes, egg plants, melons of all kinds, roses, fruits and so on through the long list "The day will come," continued Mr. Hill, "when the shores of the Colum- bla will be on a par with the banks of the Rhine or Rhone for productive ness, and when the Columbia will be like the Polisades of the Hudson or the shores of the 8t' Lawrence, crowned 4 with the homes of those who value and , appreciate nature's beauty. No stream . has more of nature's majesty and gran- . deur than the Columbia. ... "Added to Its scenio beauty, the mild ness of climate and the fortuity of soil along the Columbia make this an Ideal ' district When we returned, William, Mr. Hill's i colored chauffeur, was ready with thrf automobile for our road seeingeirlp. . Noon found us at Goldendale. I hunted up some acquaintances while- we were there. i Catching the Spirit. ! "What has ,happened to Goldendale?" :'. I asked. "From being a rather sleepy .' Place it seems to be the liveliest little town in WaBhington-paved streets, new brick blocks, bubbling drinking foun , tains, prosperity everywhere apparent What Is the explanation r "Not .only . Goldendale, but che whole . Klickitat country has caught the Hill - spirit" responded my friend. "We are v ail boosters. . We are all for good roads. ',--1 " V" "r -LiL J ' ; r i -eV MB. " ' III ' 1 ? " "', r " v 1 i rill fir Section of road constructed at Marjh ill, Washington, by Samuel Hill. A knocker is afraid to lift his voice any more. They have suddenly become very unpopular. When a man pulls out of the ruts and mud onto the Maryhlll roads and sees what can be done and how easily his team pulls the load he begins to wonder why he muslcontinue to use the old type of summerTallowed roads, a cloud of dust in summer and a sea of mud in winter. Goldendale was never more prosperous and we are all nroud of our town, and don't have to be apologetic as lots of other towns are. When the crest of the hill has been passed in Coming up from the river one sees a vast and productive territory 01 which Goldendale Is the center. Or chards, dairies, gardens, wheat fields. clover-fields snow something 01 me richnesstof the district. "This district can . be Portland s 11 Portland wants it" said Mr. Hill. "You spend all kinds of money on high priced men to get new settlers out nere ana then make no effort to annex trade ter ritory that rightfully belongs to you. For example, Goldendale is 10 miles from the Columbia by good road; five or six times that far from the railroad at Lyle. Bay, however, it Is 125 miles from Portland. It Is over 2S0 miles from Spokane. S00 miles from Seattle, over 250 Allies from Tacomk; so you see this rich territory logically belongs to Portland. "If a ferry were put in at Columbus or Maryhlll, to use its more recent name, to a point directly across the river and if the station of Biggs were moved about an eighth of a mile above its present site to the ferry landing, Portland and Oregon would secure largely increased passenger and freight traffic. Apparently your chamber or commerce are unaware of the condi tion or they would go after this trade." From Goldendale we went to Bunnyside, but that I will reserve for the next article. Vast article Jtoads Good and Bad In Central Washington. WOMAN POISONED BY CHLOROFORM IS BURIED Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Hoi den, who died Friday from- an overdose of chloroform, were held yesterday In Dunning & McEntee's chapel. Inter ment was in the Mount Scott cemetery. Mrs. Holden, who was the wife of C F. Holden of the Silver Falls Timber company of Mllwaukie, had long made it a practice to relieve toothache with chloroform. It Is thought that the first application Friday' so dulled her senses that she spilled the contents of the bot tle over her face, the excess amount of the anesthetic causing her death. DEFENDS PLANS FOR BRIDGE APPROACHES That objections raised by some resi dents of Multnomah county against the building of permanent approaches to the proposed interstate bridge from an eco nomic standpoint do not stand analysis, is the contention of- D. H. Lofgren, a member of the last .legislature which passed the law authorising the county to bond Itself for the construction of Oregon's half of the span. "I have secured comprehensive fig ures showing the cost of the trestle ap proaches now maintained," he says, "arid I believe these figures will refute the statement that a 1500,000 permanent roadway leading to the bridge is not a good investment. "The present trestle is 12,320 feet long and the original cost was about flO per lineal foot making the total. $13,200. Adding to this the cost of building the truss spans across Colum bia slough, which was 928,(00, we have $160,000 as the approximate total cost "Interest on this sum at per cent a year makes $9000. The life of the trestle work is eight years, making an annual depreciation of $11,777 in addition to the cost of redecklng twloe during this pe riod at an annual cost of $4150. This brings the total annual cost up to $33, 027. "The present trestle is 20 feet wide, but trafflo now would require a 10-foot trestle. To make up the difference in cost add 60 per cent to the foregoing figures and you have an annual cost of $50,891." Edison Stops Night Work. Orange, N. J. Not. !. Thomas A. Edison admitted that he has stopped night work, under pressure from his wife and doctor. . 1 HALLOMMS 1 - I su ARRESTS "GhW Went Ttfo Far Wheit They,' "pasted" Golden.', dale Postoffice. r'v (Specisl to Toe JncrnaLt . V ' Goldendale. Wash., - Wash Nov.' !. When Peter" Ahola, a merchant and post master "of the town of Centervllle, on the Goldendale branch of the Spokane, Portland ft Seattle railway. In the lower Klickitat valley, came to his place of business Saturday' morning and found the windows or hfs store1 .building and the postoffice smeared with paste made with flour and water,, with coloring ma terial"., added,. :. he concluded that hal loween pranks Indulged in by a party of young .Finnish people had been Car ried beyond the mirth limit Ha came to Goldendale and swort cut a warrant for Orty Tolbnen, Mabel Toionen. Alda Ahola, Viola Wall- man, ' William Jusatla, Albert Jus- slla, Sophia yussila, Paul Plngrs, Haxel Ahola, 'Robert. Wallman and Albert Wallman. The. members of the party were arrested by Sheriff Fred Smith and taken before J. B. Put- man' . Justice' of the Peace at Golden dale, charged with wilfully and unlaw fully damaging ana defacing the post office building at Centervllle, the bank building of Olllett Brothers A Co., and the butcher shop building belonging to Abshler ft Nivs, After questioning by the Prosecuting Attorney seven of the party - admitted their guilt and were fined $6 each, with the understanding that the fines would be remitted if they cleaned up the "mess that they made within one week, " -v . Halloween pranks were carried to an extent that caused criticism by Indig nant cltiiens. Business signs were changed, worm fences were built across Main street with lumber, window' were daubed with paint and vehicles were put on top of buildings. TICKET OFACE NOW , IN NEW LOCATION Marklng'a secession from the district along Third street known for years as "railroad row," the Great Northern rail way's city ticket office is now located In Its new home at Broadway and Washington street in the new Morgan building. The move was made early Saturday. i i PICTURE FILMS USED AT EVENING SERVICES In response to a general request from the congregation of the Grace Memorial church the Rev. Oswald W. Taylor, rector of the church, exhibited the films last night of "From Manger- to the Cross" to a large gathering. Rector Taylor has been instructing his Sunday school for two years by the moving picture method but lest night's exhibition to the adults of his church was a novelty. When a grocer returns a dissatisfied customer's money, she keeps what is v left of the goods. ; You see why, don't you.? We can't use a bro ken package of goods; -that isn't, it We want ; her to have it. She'll ; find-out her mistake, ;:riie goods are good; tKey :are the best sales- ttien we ve got r j. -i m - , 1 '; " j', 7s JkMlUst's BMwaTetir4e68IHoBe(seerbaek., . " " r'J ff T A SchiHine & Company . , San' Francisco v , Li P II II (D Jiimini Ik moire pmre beeir The nations that drink the most of it suffer the least from nervous ness and dyspepsia. But the slightest taint of ' impurity ruins its healthfulness. Be sure you get pure beer. GetS fl Browni Elite We make Schlitz pureemploying every innovation approved by science the Brown Bottle keeps it pure from the brewery to your glass. It will not cause biliousness it gives you the good without the harm. See that crown or cork is branded "Schlite." Rothtchtfd tiros.. ao-6 N. First Stl . . Pertlasd, Oregon J' 7 t t ! f"''lfV''irV i 1 City Passenger Agent Harry' DIcHson ays the new office win be made an immigration bureau with literature for the home seekers and to encourage set tlement In Oregon and Washington. -. ONE COUPLE REFUSED : LICENSE TO MARRY .'.i-''(8ptcll' te n'ftt&$Mthh:&-il vVancouyer, Wash., Nor, J Eleven marriage . licenses : were Issued and one was refused at the office of the county auditor Saturday. . Joe a Cabe and Miss Hasel Qulley, both of Vancouver, could not secure a license because their wit ness would not take .the required oath that ; thera were no legal obstacles ; to their marriage, s .;:,.-!'.';-. ;--.v ;'- ;' The following sectired licenses:' Paul Mlddlebrook. 19, and Miss Esta Shaffer, both of Camas; John Herr and Miss Cora Pulver. both of Camas; C. M. Podg ett and Mrs. Mattie B. Rhyme, both of Portland: Albert Wendell and Miss Lil lian Stevenson, both of .Portland; Sam uel W, Beer,-of Eugene; Or and Miss Bertha E. Lee, of Mill Village. Pa.; U Q. Gates, of Vancouver, and Miss Eva Lee of - Portland; Ralph H. Ackerson and Miss JuUa Schamp, both W Hubbard. Or.; C. Ev Kays and Mrs. Alice Crib bins, both Of Salem, Or.; James Whlt tlngton and Miss Ruby Haslett, both of Portland; T. F. McCarthy, of Portland, and Miss Otealla Burson, ot Clackamas. Or.; W. E. Deady. of Salem. Or., and Mrs. A. V. Thomas of Portland. . - ji , The Mercury Tablet. ". Los Angeles, CaL. Nov. .- Mrs. Im. maculate Cecillia Cloud, who said she was disappointed In love, swallowed bichloride ot merour tablet In Elyslan park and resisted efforts to take her to a hospital. She has a chance to live. , -v- ,; t ,. - - .. GREED IS AT BOTTOM ilililiOEtlCIES ; That iCommercialism, Has -Debasing Influence J. ;. .. 4 ' tf vUi .-'.,. ..,4. r'-:"i-;-,.ii: ( Charging that the present tendenclee v of "commercialised amusements," from ..... the vaudeville stage to the cabaret.' are downward, William T. Foster, president of Reed college, , speaking- at the Unt- -tarian church last night, charged that ' every bad tendency is directly,, traceable tO gTeed. ''.i-'.5 'V f :'a'-ri..i-li: Declaring that It is virtually Impos sible for a self respecting person to go Into any of the local vaudeville houses . and remain throughout a performance -without having his sense "ot . decency ; shocked, President Foster said he hoped v the time would come when women in the audience will rise In a body and leave the ' theatre - when anything of fensive is said or done. S -; He recommended closer regulative po " lice powers in connection with theatres, "i moving picture houses, ' cabaret cafes and amusement parks, : though be ad ' mitted. that places of amusement are 4 fairly well regulated at present. -. . He eoncluded by the declaration that -the dance : hall and theatre can .be "resoued from the downward path" and 'i be made, to assist' in uplifting young -people. . - ; . : G ,,j.'v i i i i i i i 'l.'kJ...ii.t,if.. Journal Want Ads' bring- results. , VOTERS! ATTEOTION Oregon Compensation Act We desire to inform the public that we are.in favor of a Workmen Com pensation Law, though we have criti cised certain features of the Oregon Act and still believe the defects should be corrected before its final enactment into law, but at the same time, we are not taking part in any fight against the measure; , nor will we spend a dol lar toward that end, and, further more, we. had nothing to do, either financially or otherwise, with the ref erendum on the Act. Any insinu ations or statements to the contrary are absolutely false and unsupported, and made for the sole purpose of ere- ating public hostility towanis anyone who attempts to analyze the defects of this Act. MpCargar, Bates & Lively GENEI AGENT? :".' Y AETNA LIFE INSURANCE CO., PORTLAND, PREGON. Hot Lake bpnnffs ' SBBBB ' l -Mi - fi' ''i. .t. SSSV , h , ' V ' w v , : HOT LAKE, OREGON (Union County, 9 miles east of Grande,) . ( NATURE'S WONDERFUL CURE! The hottest and most curative spring in the world. V. 1 I RFaruFn nisn.Y . yia the ,:- f : GET V'-C'i. ' V Ik " -mm m . "n I l i w m i I ! s : r WEXL . ' . - UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT ' '.y Extensive Improvement have been made in all department!.'1 SPECIAL REDUCED FARES SK ' ' ?,y from-all 0.-W. R. & N. atations. - M$ J" The MEDICATED MUD, VA?OR and MINERAL feATHStf Hot Lake have proven a boon to sufferers from Rheumatism,: Blood. ' Kidney and Liver Complaints. Accommodations at the sanatorium delightfully complete, and rates within the reach of all, ti f ' , Apply to any O.'W. R & N. agent for particularsand ask for th special rate with hotel coupon, also for booklet telling all about the f Springs; or write to G. W. TAPE, the new Manager at llpt Lake, Ore, 'I'- .V..A vl 1 'i.'f 1 ' r1 1 "A