THE OREGON DAILY. JOURNAL, . PORTLAND," MONDAY, JUNE 21, : 1911 pit r- w -fc- rsKi At J increased from $1,564,069,000 to I 1. JLIJ lNrL-i3,39T,00 0.000. the equivalent of ' "an isdkprvdknt newspaper j HO per, cent. The value of min- C. S JACKHIlt .pnbuntMT J fubisabed tnrr evening ejr(pt Snorta?) and 1 ""'7 ftvnnitj morttjni at t d tffflirsii now tn. Rmmlwur m,H Yamhill ats., Portland. Or. Kutared at tb fMwtoffle at Furtlaed. Or., for transmisfiien Usruuub tna mails as - second rlaa matter. TRLKt'IlONKHMala TIT3: hoffl. A5051. All ileonrtroent reached by the nuoubecs. Tell the opera tfy wba-t liwrttnent. you want. VOREIGN ADVERTISING BEFBEBENTXtIVB Benjamin & Kentnor Co., Branswlea- Bid-., Jfc Fifth A tp.. New Vork; 1U1S Propk-' Rubsexiptkm terns by mall or to any ad dreaa la tba Pulled Stales or-Mexico: . . ' v. DAil.V Oua rear..,,. ..$3.00 ( On month.......! .SO SUNDAY Ona year....,, .$2.00 (One month.... .25 - s UA1LY AND SUNDAY On yesr.......$7.50 On month $ .65 ... Seize, the moment of excited curiosity on any subject to solve your doubts; for, if you ; let it pass, ' the- desire may never return, and you may; re main In ignorance. W. Wirt. ; -a TIIR PRESIDENT'S' DAY A PRESIDENT of less poise could have - embroiled the "V United States In war with ... , Mexico, and have bad nis in hostile relations with that country and all Pan-America,- which would have ' been a most unfortunate status , for us at the time .the European war broke upon the world. " - - A .president of less poise would have embroiled U3 with Europe be fore now, and, instead of having peace, we too would be in ' the deadly, embrace of a horrible con flict. - ... ... ' - There is thankfulness throughout this broad land that our- firesides are intact, that our homes have no boys In the bloody trenches and that a joyous peace and tranquility rest ' over the country. It is a precious Position for us to occupy, because it Is in such contrast with the spirit of this war mad time when the unhappy people of other great nations are in the agonizing throe of conflict that is swallowing, up the resources and the lives of great countries with the frenzy of a hideous Moloch of unappeased war. It is fitting in he day of our envied' and enviable situation to heed the. appeal of Mayor Albee and devote a, thought next Thursday in recognition of our country, our free institutions and our president. If all the cities in Oregon in their own way observed the day it would be a; fitting expression- of the spirit of our common country. TRUTH IN ADVERTISING TEN thousand advertising men will attend the eleventh an nual convention, of the Asso ciated Advertising Clubs of the World in Chicago this week. It will be a notable gathering, for the sessions will be given over al most exclusively' to promoting the truth, that honesty is the best policy. ' President Woodhead : de-jBtate highway engineer, and that Clares the campaign for eliminating j all records, maps, charts, plans, the faker, the crook and the shyster equipment and furniture relating from the advertising field will be: to the work and business of the - n t i ti nan o a viri cr ' . a jus senu.n-m is coumry-wiae among . advertising men, and thai tight has been started and will be continued against fakers. Business men are generally beginning, to see that adveTtisini? Is more than a I bupinesa principle, and the only way 1 io :majce it eneciive . is to mane it ana tne treasurer nave aeiiDerateiy be4eVable, and that means sticking1 to j defied the law. i th.!Uth' , , 1. J3i ! Under our form of government, .CflCf Lalm.8, tbt Crtlt V the attorney general is the official originating the idea that - honesty adviser of , pUbliC, of flcials in All in advertising is the best policy. But !legal mattera. His office was cre ItK has grown so that it is now j ated for the purpose of interpreting nation-wide Reputable business ; the law for gtate officers tfJ the men know that their statements in , end that m 8tate buslneC8 could advertisements must be the truth be tranEacted according to law and and nothing else. Any deviation under the form3 of law Af ter from that rule means ultimate loss, Beeklng from the attorney to the advertiser, for his Integrity eeneral aa to tQe relatlong between 1 3 gauged generally by what he j . ' -w.. advertises for .ale and what he actually has in stock. , Truth in , advertising has demon etrated Its efficiency. Because they can depend upon what f they read, buyers look; to the advertising pages Tor Information. They do much of Jtheir shopping in, easy, chairs at home. V Truth : in advertising has made tlje newspaper's advertise- inents as Interesting to many of Its readers as the telegraphic and local : news. . . THE' SOUTH'S PROGRESS NORTHERNERS . intent upon their own affairs have formed the habit of looking toward . the South with a spirit of tol eration." They are Inclined to think the land of cottdn unprogresslve, tied to old waj-s and- supremely satisfied with itself. A recent cen-, bus-bulletin showing the growth of the- South's. productive interests ' be tween 1900 and : 1912 " Is , Illumr ; nating. V . , . . The South's capital invested' in manufactores increased iri twelve years from" $1,'408,866,000 to $3, ; 600,000,000;, or 14& per cent The value of output grew from $1,860, 113t000 to, $3,900,000,000, or 109 per- cent The; number - of cotton epindlea increased from 4,467,383 to 11,85 8.6 00t-the number of looms from 113.106" to- 252,000, and the amounrof .cotton tfsed' from 749,--9 1 5 ,0 6 6 ta -1 ,819 ,70 S ;0 0 Q pound s. , The " production ' 'Of. pig iron Jumped "from- 2,642,720" to H.3, 054 98ft tons. The lumber cut increased "from : 14.444,965,000 - to, 21,607, 519,000 board feet, 'or. by 49 per - cent. The capital invested" In agri rultnre, Comprising investments in land, buildings machinery and live- . stock," grew from $5,262,279.000. to $12V102.00d,000. or 12 9. per cent: The value of, agricultural products - i era! output Jumped 20ft per . cent. 1 Railroad . mileage Increased from 6 1,8 SO to 90,930; national tank re sources from $705,282,000 to $2, 112,717,000, or 199 per conti na tional bank capital from $106, 504,000. to $22,800,000,. or 127 per cent, and - deposits in .national banks jumped from $334,650,000 to $1,059,068,000, or" 216 per cent President Wilson has ,been charged with paying too much at tention to the South's Interests, the idea, being that the nation's future will be determined by developments in the North. - But the Manufao turers Record, commenting on the above figures, says: - Of the 23 different kind qf indus tries in the United States, 235 are represented in the South. The (South is cutting, more than half the lumber cut In - th whole country; It vlrtoally monopolises ,the cotton seed Industry, which turns out annually. 150,000,000 worth " of ! crude- products, and tle South . makes 70 : per cent of ill the commercial fertilizers manufactured In the United. States, having an an nual value of shout $105,000,000. Of the coals -of this country suitable for coke used ' In : smelting Iron, 75 iper cent' lies in the South, and all but two of the sixty-odd useful mineral" produced commercially in the United States are produced: ; in it the -South, which mines "practically, all of the country's output of phosphate rock, bauxite, sulphur, fuller's earth, pyrlte and other basic materials. - A BEAUTIFUIi MESS T HE full .opinion of Attorney General Brown on this page throws remarkable" meaning around the act oL Governor Withy combe and Treasurer Kay In the attempted deposing of State Engineer Lewis and the placing of Chief. Deputy Cantine in charge of the road work. Attorney General Brown holds: . 1. -The powers and duties of tranaferred to the gtate englneer. 2. The state engineer must give an additional bond of $10,000 to guarantee the faithful performance -of- his duties by the chief deputy engineer. ; ' 3. The chief deputy provided for In the Day law is answerable to the state engineer for all his acts. - 4. The state engineer is respon sible under his bonds for the acts of the chief deputy, and other sub ordinates of his department. 5.- Wherever there is a duty to be performed or authority to be exercised such duty and . authority Tare to be exercised by the state engineer in his capacity as ex officio state highway engineer. 6.-- The plans and specifications for any new road work must be i prepared under the general direc tion of the state engineer and be approved by him before -inviting bids. "; , ; 7. It was the intention of -the legislature to transfer and vest in the state engineer all of the pow ers, duties, authority and respon sibilities formerly belonging to the (Office of the state hiehwav eneliiMr shall be transferred and lodged ... . , . , .. witn the state engineer. Either the attorney general is wrong, or the governor and State -, -nm? If th Hnr. ey general is right, the governorj tun BLam riiciiicn uiu nix ariiirri deputy, the governor and state treasurer, finding, apparently, that the. law, as interpreted by the attor ney general - does not suit . their program and purposes, have elected to take the law. into their own hands and run things to. suit them selves. -" . ' . ; Their act . Is a climax' In the long series' 4 of remarkable acts that have come to pass since the contractors in Columbia county de mandecT $60,000 more of taxpayers money than BowRy would allow, and the contractors in x cjatsop county demanded $73,000 ; more than Bo wlby ; would allow." ' , It Is a culminating circumstance in a long list of assaults on-public authority ever since i. Bowlby ex posed the mulcting of the taxpay ers in bridge building, such for instance ; as in Lane county, where $186.32 a ton -was paid for steel worth at the time only ; $75 a ton f. o. b. at Eugene. In that bridge the -steel .was: worth only $9540, but the taxpayers ; paid for it $23j-700.- '''-,: , . Most remarkable of all, ' in the attempt ! to - depose ! State Engineer Lewis- . is , tbe fact that Governor Withycombe himself. In his inaugu ral message recommended' placing' of the : state highway engineer's department in the office and under the supervision, of State Engineer Lewis. Here is.the governor's recommendation to the legislature: - I suggest that, the offices of istate engineer and -state highway ' engineer b combined. . UNDER .TUB STATE ENGINEER, who shall have an un salaried advisory board of three mem bers, especially, qualified in road mat ters, to ; cooperate, with . him in . all that concerns estate -highways.- f- The legislature followed the rec ommendation. .;. It . gave .v the gov ernor what . he asked. : -It - placed the state engineer; according to the attorney -general, lit full" charge of all that "concerns state highways," but now that it' has been so ; or dered. Governor .Withycombe joins with State Treasurer Kay and,--over the advice of the' attorney general, attempts to depose State Engineer Lewis as head of the highways and install his deputy as head of the highways. t -v- ." s -- . The governor and the treasurer are not- only making Governor Withycombe's recommendation to the legislature ridiculous, but they are trying to compel State Engineer Lewis to commit unlawful acts by surrender of his authority to his chief deputy-and at the same time forcing him to give a bond of $10, 000 lor; the faithful ' performance of duty by such jchief deputy. ,;i If - the governor . and state treas urer : persist in I; their folly long enough they will destroy . the state highway department altogether and discredit further attempt for an Intelligent development? of high ways in Oregon. .. , f - , OUR NEEI'FOB SHIPS CONGRESSMAN ALEXANDER told members of the Portland K. Chamber of Commerce that passage1 ofthe ship purchase bill is necessary to an adequate ex pansion ol the country's commerce. He is chairman of the . committee on merchant maVine and fisheries and has made an exhaustive study of the problem, j , ( Mr. Alexander brought home to Portland . producers and exporters facts which they cannot dodge. He declared that under present condi tions it costs four times as much to ship lumber from here to New York as it costs to manufacture the lumber in the first place. One -Of Oregon's chief industries :4s thus throttled by lacki of ships.! . Competent observers . the conn try over are impressed more and more with the need of an adequate American merchant fleet. .The. shiR purchase bill was strangled in the senate at the last session of congress,-but that did not settle the" issue. Enough ships and reason able rates are absolutely necessary. Private capital is not meeting the situation. Commerce on the seven seas is controlled by gentlemen's agreements, community of interest arrangements and other secret al liances which hold up rates and suck the. life out; of industry. Many honest men oppose govern ment participation in the- shipping business from entire ignorance of the facts. Independent ship owners dare not embark in ' shipping be cause other so-called Independent vessels secretly owned by the inter national shipping trust drive them out of the! business through cut throat competition in which losses are recouped from the earnings of the trust. I ; : - American private lines cannot now handle South American busi ness to any extent because of a combination of five great com panies, which , has established a sys tem of rebates with South Ameri can shippers. Even tramp ships are kept out of that trade, so hard and fast is the hold of the trust upon it. ; "! . As Judge Alexander well know? and as he ' has repeatedly shown, the shipping bill was beaten in the Senate, by the monopolistic ship owners and ship- builders, a small and select coterie of American mil lionaires who care nothing for the country as a whole, but want the nation's affairs regulated for their especial enrichment. Because of their power In the federal Senate, the coming move ment of the great " grain erop of the United i States will be so ham pered by lack of ships that the farmers will v lose ' enormously through being forced to pay three times as much as they should for getting a bushel of wheat to starv ing Europe v -? The ; announcement that a scion of the house of Morgan is about to wed a girl "who knows how" to cook recalls the old . rhyme: ; "He used to dance with Annie," She waltzed with fairy grace.. He used to drive with Fannie, Sha had! auchj a ; pretty face. . ? ;: ' f ' - ,f - - ' -But he finally married Mary, For she knew how to cook. The expenditure of one and one quarter -million dollars on the county highways at this ' time Is a big proposition and means a whole lot. Future progress in highway development hinges on the results achieved. I - "f 'l-" ; Forecasting a long war the Lon don" Post advocates that home in dustry be patronized in the pur chase' of munitions , and " supplies. The dollar that stays at home goes the farthest. ' v At last Portland is going to have a sane, and safe Fourth of July, Americans pf , foreign birth and- an cestry arej going to get together and forget 'all about : th,e hyphen., The theory of a California phy sician that j.basebaU will aid in re storing sanity-; is - apparently a sound one.i being based on the old doctrine that like cures like. r Five years - from j now we will all know which is the ; best kind of pavement for highways. : We will not need to take the promot er's word for it. n Everybody I should be satisfied. The Arizona, the largest; battleship in the world, ' has been christened with water; champagne and ' whis- key.-'.- - .; ih;X-j,J,' ii,p. ,iJ; i In war, like everything else) It Is necessary to keep" 'near thebjkse of supplies. On their march to Paris the German armies got - too far away from their base and : had to stop. It was the same with the Russians on their way to Vienna, And now- the Teutonic allies on their ; way to St. -Petersburg are getting a long way from their base. : One good turn deserves another. Colonel Roosevelt 'took boxing les sons from Miktf Donovan and now Policeman T Donovan, Mike's son. loans Archibald, the former; presi dent's son, $25 with which to pay his fine for speeding, y Cast 'your bread upon the waters and after many days it shall return . to you. Hail and tornadoes In Nebraska', rain and floods In Kansas and Missouri, and yet there are some people in . Portland complaining about the June showers. THE WATCH DOGS OF THE BATTLE FLEETS - Prom the New Tork Benlns Post. SLEEK, dark. rakish, the thrcs di visions of., the . Atlantic torpedo flotilla added a new note of in terest to the fleet of war vessels lying at anchor in the North river Escorted by the scout ship Birmingham, the destroyers gilded up to their stations on tha Jersey aide of tbe river, oppo site the battleships, and anchored in single file. As with the ' submarines, crews of these venomous-appearing craft are of a class apart from the men of the battleships. The uniform they weAr most often Is the blue dun garee, spattered with grease and oil, with .almost disreputable", watch-caps reposing at "every conceivable angle. Each destroyer, which contains a crew numbering from 100 to 185, is a har monious home, where 'officers and men are brought into close contact, and where mutual respect and under standing obtain. Today, for example, a grimy , chief machinist's mate approached a young officer in uniform, 'and without the formality of . touching bis cap the officers and men are thrown so close ly together on these craft that con stant saluting has fallen into the dis card set forth - his case. "We have gone over those baffle plates, sir, and they: don'f appear to show why we torched coming up the other night. Unless, perhaps, they're a little -leaky.' :- "1 guess, perhaps, they, are leaky," replied the officer. "Walt a minute." He went to his cabin and slipped on overalls and a canvas Jacket, Then he went into the vitals of the craft and for half an hour worked with 'a wrench, a lle, a steel saw, and sev eral other implements. "'J - ' -I'.. : "ion could Just see his legs, and the men of the engineering- division stood about, lending a helping hand when the muffled voice called for it, but in the main ,simply; leaving, the. issue up ti'-'lii. I young 'lieutenant When he reappeared, hands and" face blackened, and a long scratch above the wrist, he smiled and gave the men a little talk. That is to say, he told these machinists, qualified men all of them. Just what the matter was and how he had made temporary" repairs. As the machinist's mate had surmised, the trouble was leaky tubes, causing fire to escape from th fun nels when the craft was speeding. The officer returned to his cabin and in a short time was on deck, immacu late as ever. Throughout the best of fellowship was displayed between this man and the crew; the sailors knew their places and -the officer knew his, but above and beyond was that com mon interest which close association brings. The lieutenant knew more about his business than his men, which was precisely a, should be. and he was as willing to get down and grovel in the heart of things as they were. ' "You know." he said, . standing on the deck and gazing over toward the big Texas, "w have outlived our name technically. We are not really torpedo boat destroyers any more.' In fact, this name; has died out in .the navy; we re . destroyers. There, are no more torpedo boats to destroy, as a matter of fact; pur craft, by way of all-around efficiency, long aga rele gated them to the scrap heap. But what we really . are and should be called : is battleship protector. That is what we are , really. Submarines have thrown the capital ; ship abso lutely upon our protection. ' No bat tleship is safe in submarine Infested waters Without us. Give two to each battleship there are not enough' of ns to do this in our navy, worse for tuneand that dreadnought will i be pretty well "protected "from subs. "Of course, it Is not absolutely cer tain protection, but,, believe ' me, we have been able to hold i up our end against the submersibles. What our maneuvers showed is not public -rrop. erty yet, but I think 1 can say that whereas the subs have put it over on ns, we,. In turn, have turnjed a trick or two at the expense of .the submer sibles. - Tou see a submarine hates a swift craft that can also make a quick turn worse than poison. " "Could two or three destroyers have taken care of the Lusitania?" The officer reflected a minute. "They could have come pretty near doing It, he said. "Mind, X don't say It is - a certainty, but the chances would be favorable for the destroyers. Tou see." ' they can , scuttle : around ahead, astern and alongside a liner; and. even if they miss the submarine, they can riddle a torpedo under way with machine guns. . I wish 1. could tell you how we put a submarine out of commission with, a, drag- line be tween two of us.-" 6f . coursctha line broke, - and - the submarine " was only technically out" of -commission; but. had it been a chain, which, we should have used In war The officer 'j shrugged his. shoulders. 1 Proceeding. he ' pointed out - that, aside -t from affording protection to j tttleships, the destroyers . do valu-t .w. i.ara on uiir own mcvvuuy ; way of torpedoing capital ships of the enemy. He said -that maneu ver, had t pretty well demonstrated that two de- stroyers can' 'make a Jot of trouble, fa'r tL hatMeshin and that when -vou - ror a Dattiesnip, and . mat 4wnen you place four destroy era against " one dreadnought, you are placing odds in . . . , . i. craft. Allow two destroyers, or per haps one destroyer and two sub marines, -to every 10 miles of seacoast, he said, and you are pretty certain to hold battleships sufficiently afar "off shore to give - the - coastwise forts many idle days. At' the same time, you allow your own battleships to go to sea and give them a wide radius of action without bothering about the protection of the coast, save; insofar as they protect the -coast by fighting and sinking enemy vessels before they have get within sight of land. Tou hear a sreat deal of the sub marines in this war,' said another ofn fleer, who came up at the time, "but if the allies and the Germans really get down to real, sea fighting, you will see where the destroyer figures. Very, often you hear battleship men cite fthe war In the far east between Russia and Japan" as establishing the utility of the' battleships above all other craft, but you must remember that Admiral Tko had to nurse his destroyers just as we would have to do dealing the greatest injury with the smallest risk to his comparatively small fleet of destroyers. Had he had more destroyers, we undoubtedly would have heard a great deal more of their ability to inflict damage with their torpedoes.",. A FEW SMILES Officer (instructing recruit in slg nailing) Didn't you get that , message? Recruit Tes, sir; three taubs an' a Zep'lin c o m i n hover 'ill. Officer : Then w h.y the deuce didn't you send it on? Recruit Well, sir, Hi couldn't 'ardly believe it. - - Lady Passenger (up In aeroplane and n e r v o u s) Hadn't we better descend now? Some thing might go wrong with tbe en gine. Aviator - D o n't worry, miss. NV en- gine can prevent us making good time on the return trip.- Letters From the People ( Communication aent to The Journal for publication in tbla department abould be writ tec on only one slda -jt :he paper, should not exceed 300 wards in 'c-th and most be ae eompanied by the name and address of toe Bender. If the writer does not desire to have tba nmw published, he shoold so state.) "Diacnarion is the greatest of aU reformers. It rj.tlonali7.ea eTerythiny" It toacbea. It rob principles of all false sanctity and tbrows tben.' back on their reasonableness, t they have no reasonableoesa, it ratbleaKly crushes them ont of existence and sets op -its own conclusions in their stead." Woodrow Wilson. . The Public Market Matter. Portland, Or.t June 16. To the Edi tor of The Journal In Monday's Jour nal the spokesman of the Retail Gro cers association criticises Mr. Bigelow and others associated with the public market. It is strange, after the revel ations of Ivy Iee'a publicity campaign in Colorado, in behalf of the Rockefel ler interests, how anyone ' associated with tbe Retail Grocers' association can come out and work against an in stitution that is of so much benefit to the public as is the public niarket. All this talk of. Chinese and Japanese and other foreigners is an appeal to race Hatred for the purpose of benefit ing th . Retail Grocers, association. Mr. Duncan knows, and we all -know, that nothing Is said against the com mission men who buy their produce from Asiatics In California. Why? then, use arguments to stir up prejudices that will benefit no one but a clique that are known to resort to extreme methods? The members of the Retail Grocers' association do not hesitate to sell to j their customers produce raised by Japanese Or Chinese g'lrden ers. A survey at the position whence comes the whine will reveal the cause. When it comes to price fixing, it has often been hinted that it 1 done in , other places than ' on the ; public market. A grand jury (not necessarily a federal) investigation might reveal a "combination in restraint of trade" nere in Portland. : : The trouble 1 not with the public market nor with the Individual grocer, but . with a condition. These "dealers whose mlndr are so intent on their business t that - they -haven't time to think of anything else, allow a leader to land them In such controversies as this one over the people'aJrarket. Let us hope they soon come to? Vir "enses. Here s to the wideawaltff5rrocer who is willing to abide by the Golden Mtule, '- A CONSUMER - INDEX OF ADVANCING TIDE OF PROSPERITY V" From the Chicago Herald. - Specifications were received in vthe Chicago lumber; market from the Illinois Central railroad yes terday asking for bids on 2,600,000 feet of yellow pine and approxi mately 850,000 feet of cypress. This is the largest single railroad1 inquiry received in- the local mar ' ket for several months, and. ac-' -cording to "officials the lumber 1s- J to be tiaed. in preparing freight cars. . - - t Officials . say -they have ; every reason to . believe prospects of reatly Improved, business condi tinnsi in the next few months are favorable, and it l their inten- t tion to prepare for the movement I of . the enormous crops predicted throughout tne country. The awarding -of this contract Will make a totaof about 7,000. 000 feet . of lumber purchased by this railroad since: the. first of the I year, and there has -also: Been rt-; 'ceived at the CArbondaJe, J1L, and J prenada, Miss., treating plants of f toe company a, sau.uvv ceei ux um bers and 329,000 lineal feet of pil- I'ing to be used In repairing- and reoulltxxiiK onuses- uuiiua - , luo coming summer season. ' PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE r A. man never does what hia wife expects him to. , . I - ;-hr beart, aad 8ec. ond love mends them. . . . t - 1 ' a self-made man a lifetime to correct his b&d grammar. -i ; , . - - When two cats tlzht in the dirk On the sea of" adversity the pawn broker is captain of the watch I There is always something " coming to us that wjb should like to see side tracked. - , - - ' ' ." . ' But a woman always stops talking long enough , to give a man a chance to propose. - -i. .... e , I - Love Is a malady of the mind that wells the head but makes 110 look like 30 cents. : i - ' - ' A man's expenses flourish like the weeds in his garden, wails his income doesn't do much better 'than the gar den proper. . --- - -. ' It is sometimes the case that la man who refuses -to climb a fence i to do somethinfc useful will tear down a rock wall to make a fool of himself. STATE ENGINEER jCONTRQLS STATE ROADS OPINION BY ATTORNEY GENERAL BROWN . -Following- is the full text of the opinion of Attorney General i Brown- rendered in response to interrogatories presented by State Engineer John H. Lewis concerning the respective and relative powers and duties of the state engineer and the ' state highway - en gineer under enactments of the Oregon; legislature, session of 1916: - j State of Oregon, legal department, Salem. Or,, May S, 116. ( Honorable John H. Lewis, state en gineer, Capital building. Dear Sir: " I have before me your favor I of the lsth ultimo, received during ray ab sence, and will endeavor to answer the questions therein r submitted in their order: - j , 1. Will the state .engineer, have the "powers' of the state highway en gineer under chapter 339. laws of 1918. j when the consoli Jati6n bill ' (chapter o, jaws i9ii; Becomes eiieciivc? Section 1, chapter 337, page 537. laws of 1915. reads as follows V The office known as the state high way engineer as defined by section 3 of chapter 339 of the-session laws of 1913 is hereby abolished, and the pdw era, duties and work now performed by the . state highway engineer shall be vested in and placed under the charge and direction of the state engineer, and wherever in any law how in force in the state of Oregon, the name f "state highway engineer" appears it shall be considered that the same "state, en gineer - is substituted in- lieuthereof. It will be noticed from the pro visions of the section quoted that the state engineer Is vested with the pow ers and duties of and "to work per- formed by the state highway engineer provided in cnapter I3 or the laws or 1913. It is also apparent that It is only the office of state highway en gineer as ' a separate and distinct of fice which is abolished and not any of his powers and duties, .such powers and duties being simply transferred to the office of the state - engineer and not abolished with .the ofice tof which they were formerly attached by said Chapter- 839, laws of 1913. j . 2. TO it be necessary for the state engineer to file, an additional bond of 810,000." as provided In section 3. chap ter 839, laws Of 1913? J-.. I The filing of this bond is one of the duties required by said chapter i339, to be performed by the state highway en gineer and consequently passes to the state engineer by the transfer of such duties under chapter 337, laws of 1915. 3. If the governor appoints a "chief deputy in the office, of the state en gineer," will such "chief deputy state engineer report to the state engineer? Tbe affirmative Answer to this ques tion follows from the very words them selves, r The word, "deputy is defined in Second Words and Phrases, At page 5, as follows: v--"-'-'- :-. -; 1 The deputy is but the officer's shadow and . doeth all things i in - the name of the officer himself and notn inr in his own name. I . A deputy is one who by appointment! exercises an office in another's right, havinsr no interest therein - and doing all things in his principal's name, for whose misconduct the principal la answerable.- i A deputy is a subordinate officer au thorized to act In place of the principal officer In his absence. 1 It therefore follows that the chief deputy provide for in chapter: 839 will be answerable to the state en gineer for all of his acts and tbe state engineer will be responsible j to the state . and all other parties jrelying thereon. - .... ' - - . - 4. Will the state engineer be respon sible under his official bond for the acts of - his chief deputy and other subordinates of his department? The answer to this is determined by the answer to question number three as to the chief deputy, and it follows that the f state ' engineer will j be re sponsible also ' for the assistants to said chief deputy, inasmuch as their appointment by the chief deputy is in effect an appointment by the state engineer, . inasmuch as the - chief - dep uty can perform no act by his : own authority, but- acts only by the au thority of bis superior- officerf vested in and delegated to him by the law and his appointment as chief deputy. .- - S.'In the contract tecently executed for the construction of the Mitchell -pnint Mrinn at the fnlumhi. High way, many points are left for final de- ctsion by the .state; highway engineer. He must appoint the engineer to direct the work on the-ground, must Approve vouchers, etc. , Will the words "state engineer" be aubstituted for state-highway engineer when reading this con tract after May 22, . or will i it read 'chief deputy state engineer?"; Since chapter 337, laws of 1915; makes the state engineer in effect the state highway engineer, wherever there is a duty to be performed or an i authority exercised under contracts ex ecuted at the time said chapter takes effect, such duty and authority are to be performed and exercised there after by the state engineer ini his ca pacity as ex-offlcio state highway en gineer. This i Is f gathered t rem . the terms of "the act itself. t It is also fundamental that statutes relating- to procedure and remedies; operate as to matters pending at the time such acts take ef feet. v And the transfer of pow ers and duties - from. the ?offie .of state highway - engineer to the state engineer, - and ' the furnishing I to : the state engineer of a chief deputy and other assistants. Is a mere matter of procedure and does not create any new rights or duties in. respect to; any of the contracts existing for the construc tion of highways. at the time said act takes effect.-Consequently the words "state engineer, from and after the time when , saii "chapter ; becomes - ef fective are to be understood instead of thei words " "state highway engineer"; or in other words," the state highway engineer , from and after said i date is the state engineer, i - - i - 6. Must the plans - and specifica tions -for -any new, work be -Wenared AND NEWS Iff BRIEF - -) OREGON SIDELIGHTS No nwsppr In, Oregon can excel the! palter lemocrat! In picking up item like, this: "Fruit growers in the 4:aster;t part of the county and ulin? Snake river nay there will be a record breaking; crop of peaches this yew and of the finest 'juallty ever." :', :V, r-v.: v-. ?r rV fcnlem Stateman's O. K.' on the good roads cause: "Multnomah county yesterday- let the contracts for,, her 55 mlles-of paved roada. She is leading thei wmv in Oregon; for all main high ways will eventually be paved, in this pneumatic ant) rapid-transit afte." iX "0"' ' ' ' ' 'v." v- ' r'.J."" ;:'-- Astorianf The KJaskanlne fish hatch efyi has proved its worth and the fish and game commission will do well to direct its attention in that direction. The warm waters vof the lower rivtrj 8 re the best ror propagation, ana pro visions should - be made to materially add to the Increase of tha Klaskanine output,. Klamath Falls' remitation as a law abiding city will be much enhanced by the following, in the Herald: "In or der to stimulate criminal business in th office of the Justice of the peace, the ppesont, incumbent, K. W. Gowen, is conBldering euttinr down finns one half, and if this dos not help, he threatens to cut to SB per cent. I under ! the general directions of the state engineer and be approved by him before inviting bids under section 12, chapter laws of 1913? This question is answered by tbe answers to the foregoing ' questions. It is a part of the duty of the state highway engineer to prepare plans and specifications, and this duty, passes to:jthei state engineer by his substitu tion as state highway engineer; or in other ! words by his becoming state highway engineer by virtue of his of fice, "f .". v t. If you should take the view that the legislature did not intend to con solidate the "power" as well as the f "duties" and -"work" of the highway engineer, with the state engineer, but that two separate engineeringOffices shall be maintained, will the state en gineer be responsible for the loss of any maps, records, equipment and furi nitjure, of the highway engineer's de partment in case he" should fail to take possession of this material and trans fer the sarne to his department as di rected; by section , of chapter 837, laws of 1915? v ; Answering this question I would say that I do not take the view suggested in ! the beginning of said question, but following the well known principle that the acts of the legislature are to be received and construed according to thei intention expressed therein, we must understand that it was the in tention of - the legislature to transfer' and vest in the state- engineer all of the powers, duties, authority and re sponsibilities formerly belonging to the state highway; engineer. Section 2 specifically requires that "all records, maps, charts, plans, equip ment i and furniture t relating to the work and business of the office of the state highway engineer shall be trans ferred and lodged with .the . state en gineer." Also, as already seen, the state 1 engineer is required to give a bdnd for the faithful performance of his duties. - v;. o-' : I cannot understand this language otherwise than as meaning the state engineer : is responsible for all of the property of the state as well as indi viduals, coming Into his possession, to the same extent as the state highway engineer during the -existence of that office;-- The only thing, found in chap ter 337' tending to inject any ambiguity Into It is that contained in section 3, wherein it is provided that the chair man of the state highway commission, who is the governor, may appoint a chief deputy to the state engineer who shall serve at the pleasure or tne chairman, of the state highway com mission: that such chief deputy shall have charge and direct supervision of all work In the department which was heretofore lrr charge of the state high way engineer, add that such additional deputies and assistants as the state highway commission shall deem nec essary in tbe road department shall be appointed by such .chief deputy state engineer, subject to the approval of the state highway commission. ITaklng these words literally and not construing them in connection with the remainder of the statute and the legal principles governing the appointment and authority, of deputies as herein before defined, would manlf estly re sult In an anomalous condition. For instance, the chief deputy is to be ap pointed by the governor and serve at his pleasure, but he is a deputy to an other :of fleer elected by the people, and whose - authority is - prescribed by statute. His duties 'are to -be defined by - the highway commission, another independent tribunal under the statute. The Chief deputy is to have direct charge of the work formerly performed by the state highway engineer, audi to appoint his own deputies and assist ants as approved by the state highway Co-mntf sslon. ilA more complete mixture and con flict of authority could not well be invented, expressed, or even imagined, if taken literally, but -as already sug gested, this language if to receive a construction according to the intention, which must be ascribed to the legis lature to enact a legal and -valid law and not a nullity. -- j It has often been announced by our own supreme court as well as by the supreme court of the United States And of the several states of the Union, that the legislature elng one of the three i coordinate branches of the gov ernment must be credited by the Ju dicial and administrative departments With acting in g-ood faith in every, re speetj and its acts are" to receive ever intendment la favor of their validity and the motives of the legislature are not - to .be impugned by tbe other branches of the government. '.' J This being true, therefore, it Is evi dent ibavt the Intention of the legis lature in enacfing, said chapter 337 was to transfer the work, powers and duties of the state highway engineer to the state engineer with a chief deputy to have immediate charge f such work and to be in fact as well as in nairoe a deputy to the . state engi neer, and not an independent officer. I The chief deputy state engineer hav ing immediate ciiarge of the highway work of ald office and therefore be ing in immediate relation to the state highway commission, it is provided that he shall be appointed by the chair man -.tot- said commission, and shall serve at tbe pleasure of -said chair man Jandper form such duties as are prescribed by said commission. This is evidently for the reason that such chief (deputy shall be at 11 times in fcarmonyswlth the state .highway com mission and its chairman, and the f ur ther authority given to such chief deputy to appoint his own deputies and assistants as approved by the State highway commission Is for the same purpose. None of this language, how ever. Is to'be understood as depriving the state engineer of any of his au thority in adminVstering in a general way -the work formerly performed by the state highway engineer, nor as re- TV T"1 -AK ri r ,v ' , "a sr w j -iX AAKLT SATS Wr Trad toolday. tpaeial Sti Writ at Tha Journal. N. F. Nelson lives at Krownsvillr A prophet is not without honor mv in his. own country, and lrownsvill has no realisation of the fact h i one of her most interesting chararler ' He Is small, his hafr and benr.i a; pay. Hard work and rheumatic wV twlsled h, f'Kfrs out owhat We sat on the porch of the Urownr ville hotel for an hour or mn during tl' Unn county pioneer reunion and h told me of his past and his plans fo the future. "I was born on a far near Springfield, Sangamon ount Illinois, on June 8. 1839," said Mr,.Nt-I son. "I was 12 years old whrn started for Oregon In mi. My father' name was George II. Nelson, lie ol ways spoke of himself as a Virginian but he was born In 1807 In OeOrKl and was raised in VirKiuia. M mother's maiden name was Thetl Norrls. She was born in North Coio Una on July. 14. ,1S00." When fmlc married her she was a widow wltu pi children. Her name was llardcastl' Ultimately six more children wer added to the -family. We wintered t rorUandin 1861. Father chorod aroun. and made a little money. ' -"In February, 1853. I went to Orr gon City and became an apprentice o Asahel Bush on the Oregon Btatesmar I was to work for him for five yen r and was to receive 8100 a year. Mi Rush used to sleep in the office. II had a bed that was rolled up durln the day.v At night he got it out an nutde it up on the floor. I slept wit) hire for quite a while. He wan a-voi -neat younjr man, careful of his drew and rather precise. He was a wonder i fully shrewd man and a natural mono 1 maker. H0 became the state prlnif: end had the law hooks printed in th east at New Tork prices but ii. charged Oregon prices, for,, the print ing and made authors of money oi' the work. j "Dr. McLpughlfm end Mr. Bush wer." good friends. Mr. Hush' would fro fluently send me over to Dr. McLough lln's with a note to borrow money t pay off the printers. Dr, McLouKhll, would admit me to his office whet he had what seemed to mv boyish eye great stacks of 20 gold Dices D.n eight-sided 850 gold, slugs. Pr, M. Loughlln was a wonderfully kindly ma: though he, looked stern. lie mn.l much of me and of course 1 gnatl admired him. He bad long, white hat which fell Ho his shoulders. He hn, blue eyes that seemed to look elei through you. He was tall and n straight as a lance. j "We had a printer by the name 01' Zllber working in the office. H live Just across from Oregon City at Llm City. He had a daughter named Kui genla. She used to come to the offtc occasionally to see her father. Hh. soon developed quite a -fondness fo:' her father and dropped in to see liini very often. Pretty soon I discover.-. that Mr, Uush was returning the vir.lt sne made to her father. He would c.ii me from my work and say, 'Take thl letter across the river.' Carrying thei love letter's became a rtrettv stesul- Job for me. .When the capital of Ore. gon moved to Salem the paper followc" the capital and when the capital w.i Corvallis the Oregn Stateman picke. up its type and presses and moved t. Corvallis. Soon the capWal came bod to Salem and the Statefman cam I along and has been in Salem evt since. . "I carried the letter from Mr. CuL to Rev. F. S.;Hoyt asking him to per j form the wedding ceremony for Mr Bush and Miss 'Eugenia 5.ilber.",Thll Was in Ralem. President HoyC was u the Willamette university, thouRh the-, did nSt call it that in those days. H-; was teaching a class and I had to k ! in and hand him the note. All th students looked at me until I felt as i 1 I had shriveled all up and there wu f nothing left of me but hands end feet! President Hoyt smiled as he read th -s note and told me to tell Mr. Hush h would be most happy to serve him Mr, Bush did not invite his printer to the wedding I hsd been with Mr. about two years and had- been proi moted from devil to compositor nn pressman. Henry Brown was tli devil. He later became an historiBJ and is the author qf an excellent -political history of Oregon. About . dozen of us, Including Henry Hrowi and myself, secured some bells, ti pans and a horse fiddle and held charivari in honor of the newly maV ried couple. We certainly made nlKh hideous for a while. ; "Most of the big men used to com. in to talk with Mr. Bush. I remernb. while we were in Oregon City, A. I, Lovejoy used to spend lots of eve nings at the office. As I slept wit' Mr. Bush, in the office and as I was . rather bashful and diffident boy, a-pent my-evenings in the printing of flee. Mr. Lovejoy used to tell abou going with -Marcus Whitman durln the winter and of how they got Iok end ate " horse meat and Qoktt an. about other .adventures on the plains I listened .with Intense enjoyment, asked Mr. Bush If he didn't enjo learlng Mr, Lovejoy talk. He saio 'Well, I have .to listen whether I en Joy ltor not. It won't do to offend . man of his standing. "In those days they were ver abusive and plain-spoken in the pa pert Billy Adams was running the Argus a Oregon City.- I. W. Craig Was hi foreman. , Mr. Bush always poke o Mr. Adams as 'the deluded editor o the Alrgoose.' He usually referred t T. J. Dryer; the editor of the Week! Oregonian, as 'Toddy Jep Uryer,' b cause Mr. Iryer was pretty fond o toddy and other liquors. The othe editors in speaking of Mr. liuh 01 not call him Asahel Bush, but 'that a of hell. Bush." John I. Gaines uxr to use the personal pronoun e ko, deal, so -whenever Mr. Bush spoke o him in the paper he called him 'I, Jo) P. Gaines." It made Gaines furiou He got a rawhide, and following Mr Bush to the secretary of state's of fit one day, he tried to whip him. Seer tary Hamilton stepped between th. n and prevented the fight. Mr. Gain said, 1 will rawhide you the firot tlm I see you.' Mr. Bush came to the f fice and told E, M. Waite, his preH man, and. the rest of us about it. U got his pistol out of his dek and eal .' 'As certain as that conceited ax, "I John P. Gaines," comes here with l.i rawhide and attempts to flog mo, J j., so certainly will 2 shoot him dow; like a dog.' " Iieving bint from any pf his responsl bilities which formerly devolved vi the state highway engineer. It then fore follows that if the chairman v. the state highway commission ghoul appoint a chief deputy to the state ft, gineer'who is not acceptable to tt state engineer, the latter officer woul not be bound to accept uia servk. nor ' coutfthe commission author! him to per ro cm any duties contrary t tbe wish of his superior in oft t from which It is evident that althou he serves at the pleasure of the chair man of said commisslon, he serves a': to this extent at the pleasure of t state engineer, slr.ee he is the depu; to j the state, engineer and not to chairman of; the his;.') way court;!. .Very lespectfully yours, GEOnOU M. EI!..)V,ni. . ' -. Attorney Omit , G