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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1909)
THE 3I0RXIXG OREGOXIAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1909. 11 0 ..:1 i ' ill I.I.,,.. v.mi.ll : t ' !! II i'li I lull,. rh.. ,li'l:ll:liiiliil'iti.,:;P , - '" v. lilM :,..,,,liSi!!;niii!l;iii!iiiiiili Deep Sea Fishing at BAYOCEAN , Just, outside Tillamook Bay you may enjoy one of the most fascinating of all sports A Few minutes from your Summer Cottage Old Ocean furnishes' sports innumerable, and one of the best of all is the deep-sea. fishing outside Tillamook Bay. Take a staunch, seaworthy launch at the BAYOCEAN bay beach. In a few minutes you are on the Pacific itself rocked by the swells that later spend themselves across the wide ocean beach of the resort. Cast your line over the side and down it goes among the inhabitants of that mysterious world, the bottom of the sea. ' From 100 to 125 feet is the best depth for rock cod and groupers. The rock cod makes a game fight until near the surface, when the low pressure-;-to which he is totally un accustomed forces his complete" surrender. , Half a dozen varieties of deep-sea fish mav be caught within a few minutes' ride of BAYOCEAN BAYOCEAN where your Summer cottage will await your return after a day's sport on the bosom of the Pacific. This sport is but one of several the visitor at BAYOCEAN will enjoy. Potter-Chapin Realty Company 514 Corbett Bldg., Portland, Or. 416 R. A. Long Bldg. Kansas City, Mo. 210 State Savings Bank Bldg. Butte, Mont. 901 Monadnock Bldg. San Francisco, Cal. 421 Columbia Bldg. Spokane, Wash. DAD MAKESBOYBAD Probation Officer Says Parent Often to Blame. CITY SAVES BY SYSTEM John Teuscher Declares Portland Gains $50,000 Annually Through Juvenile Court Child Lire Discussed at Church. One of the largest audiences which has yet attended the Civic Institute thronged the Unitarian Church yesterday when the second session on child life was in prog ress. Child life from the point of view of the dependent and delinquent child was discussed: and the problems con fronting the Juvenile Court and the child labor commission were taken up. The probation system means another chance for the boy," said John Teuscher. probation officer. "It may mean a chance to do better; it may mean another chance to cheat the law. That depends on the boy. I cannot give you any rules for the treatment of a boy. I would have to see the individual boy first. "The hearing of the case gives us most of our Information. Some we get from school records, some from different so cieties which look out for children. But most of It we get from the boys own story, unassisted by legal learning, and unobstructed by a delinquent parent Many of the parents of delinquent chil dren are themselves delinquent and aid their boys to evade the law. "It is hard to reach the delinquent parent. It is even harder to reach the pa'rent who contends that his boy can do no wrong, and will listen to no proof. Some parents lead their boys to look 5n us officers as men with big sticks to rompel them into submission; others .ook on us as grafters. This impedes ur work. Very few parents give the soy the true and helpful idea that we are tils friends. "The probation system saves Portland J50.0O0 a year in one item alone. Two hundred and seventy-eight children were placed on probation last year. An ordi nary police court would have sent at least 200 of these to the Reform School, which operates at a cost of 9272 apiece. We only sent 40 to the Reform School all told. We could do this because we have a system of looking out for the boys outside the Reform School, a system the total cost of which is only $10,000, in cluding the operating of -the court." The exact provisions of the Oregon child labor law were presented by Mrs. Millie R. Trumbull. W. T. Gardner, of the Boys' and Girls' Aid Society, spoke on "The Dependent Child." "There is no difference between a dependent and a delinquent child." he said. "A child living in bad and immoral surroundings lo classified as either. Mrs. D. C. Burns told of the work of the Baby Home and Mrs. P. J. Mann of the Children's Home. Father George Thompson spoke on behalf of the Catho lic institutions for dependents, compris ing three orphanages and the Sisters of the Good Shepherd. PAVER ASKS TIE Montague-O'Reilly Company to Hurry Hoyt Street. LUCILE DEWAR - INDICTED Grand Jury Accuses Young Woman Who Wrote Shady Letters. Ducile Dewar. a Portland young woman of good family who created much talk last Spring by sending a number of let ters to different people signing to them the names of other women, was Indicted yesterday by the Federal grand jury on a charge of sending an Improper letter through the mails. The grand Jury filed three indictments in other cases yester day. The letter to which the grand jury took offense was one addressed to Gerald Thomas. 47 East Ankeny street, April 16. to which she signed the . names of Edith Sheehy and Genevieve Kelly. From the wording of the Indictment it was evident that the larger part of the letter would not bear repetition, even in a legal document, and only the few open ing and closing words of the letter were quoted. The indictment declared that the writer of the' letter was aware that it was too indecent to be permitted In the malls. Edwell F. Cooper was Indicted by the grand Jury for having refused to appear and testify in regard to some land mat ter before C. w . Moore, register of the land office at The Dalles, on April 30, For selling liquor to the Indians of the Grand Ronde Reservation on July 13 Edward Hagerstrom was Indicted yester day by the Federal grand Jury. In the case of D. B. Emmet, also charged with selling liquor to the Grand Ronde Indians, the grand jury returned not a true bill. LIMIT SET AT THIRTY DAYS Don't waste your money buying plas ters when you can get a bottle of Chamberlain's Liniment for '25 cents. A piece of flannel dampened with this liniment is superior to any plaster for lame back, pains in the side and chest, and much cheaper. Trunks, suitcases and bags. Lrgeat variety at Harris Trunk Cow Member of Executive Board Says Way Is Impassable $ 13,000 Contract liet for Paving Belmont on East Side. Mayor Simon yesterday afternoon called the Executive Board's attention to the bad conditions prevailing on Hoyt street, betweea Ninth and Twelfth streets, where Belgian blocks have been ordered laid. The Montague-O'Reilly Company holds the contract, and President O'Reilly had asked the street committee for an ex tension of time for two months In which to complete the 'work. The Mayor said he would prefer not to grant so much time, and the committee amended its recommendation granting but 30 days. ; 'The street Is in a worse condition than any I have ever seen," said L. G. Clarke, a member of the Executive Board. "The contractors plowed It up last Summer, and we had dust all through the Summer and Fall; now we have mud so thick pedestrians cannot - cross the street. In front .of our own establish ment, at Ninth and Hoyt streets, we built pur own temporary sidewalk, the only one on the street for seven blocks." Thursday morning Mayor . Simon had called attention of President O'Reilly to the condition of the street. The Mayor demanded that Immediate steps be taken to remedy it. Mr. O'Reilly contended that his company had been held back In Its work by the Water Board, but the Mayor Insisted that, if the contract ing company did not at once proceed, the city would do so and charge the cost to the contractors. Waddell & Harrington, of Kansas City, were engaged by the Executive Board as engineers on the East Twelfth-street steel bridge, soon to be' built. It is a small span, and the cost of the engineer ing work will be about $1600. Mayor Simon Inquired whether the bridge com mittee had considered the question suffi ciently to recommend the employment of such an engineer. Chairman Brown re plied that City Engineer Morris had rec- . ommended it; that lit requires a good deal of inspection work at the factory where the steel Is made, which can better be done by an engineering firm. A contract for paving Belmont street, between East Thirty-sixth and East Thirty-ninth streets, was awarded to the Pacific Bridge Company for $13,000. This street has been in an almost impassable condition and Mayor Simon and City Engineer Morris, with the assistance of the members of the street committee, secured a bid and have already started to make the improvement. POKER LAYOUT CONVICTS Circumstantial Evidence Enough to Secure Gambling Fines. T. Shay, the proprietor of the Sympo sium Club, In the Hotel Gilman, at First and Alder streets, was fined $200 by Judge Bennett yesterday for conducting a gambling-house. Fourteen men who had been arrested with Shay as players were each fined $20. The total, $4S0, was paid by Shay. Detectives TIchenor and Howell, who raided the place, made out a case against Shay, although they were unable to Drove that any money had changed hands. The case was tried before a Jury the Renew Your Rosy Cheeks " MlllMilMMlMlllMlhlMHlHiHinilflli Thin, impoverished blood is what makes people pale and anaemic. This weakened and common con dition demands prompt attention to avoid the development of a spe cific disorder. At thi9 stage cannot be too highly recommended. Combining the staunch vigor of bar lev malt with the tonic properties of choicest hops, it forms a liquid food that is rapidly transformed into rich, red blood and rebuilds and revital izes the muscles and nerve tissues. Insitt Ufon It Bttng "Pain. Is "" li;"-'"iii!jiii.ii Order Dozen from Your Local Druggist day before. Evidence consisting of all the paraphernalia of poker and showing that the door of the place wag constant ly locked was produced by the officers. The decision and resultant fine la re garded ae a blow to the gambling frater nity, who have been boasting that they could operate In spite of the police be cause it would be almost Impossible to prove that money had actually changed hands in their games. Encouraged by their victory on circum stantial evidence, the police announce, they will redouble efforts to apprehend the games conducted behind cigar stores and other places hitherto claiming ex emption upon the ground that they are playing merely, for fun. BAR BOY HITS STRANGER Logger Punched for Interference In Saloon Controversy. Charles Mays, a bartender, was ar rested yesterday afternoon for assault ing A. S. Newton, a logger. Mays had been the custodian of $10' for an ac quaintance who had drawn $5 on the ac count and after a debauch and some time in jail, came back to collect from the bartender. He had forgotten that he had sent for $5 of the money to pay his fine in court, and while Mays was explaining the sit uation to him, Newton, a stranger to both men, took up the controversy. Words followed and the bartender landed on Newton. His arrest followed. Piper Heldsleck is a name hard to spell, easy to remember, and that stands for the best chewing: tobacco In the world. pv M MvJ. rll .