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About The times. (Portland, Or.) 191?-19?? | View Entire Issue (May 25, 1912)
THE TIMES Oregon Savings It Trust company, re isg at Baker on the question of the ! wives a parole or not. is now for Gov- valuation of the Sumpter Valley rail- ernor West to say. for the parole hoard road. Published every Saturday by THE TIMES COMPANY, Incorporated has recommended that he be paroled Thirty or more southern Oregon » t 212 F ir t l S treit. Portland. Oregon. P h on es: Main 5 6 3 7 ; A -2636. at the expiration of his minimum sen physicians assembled in Roseburg Sat- tence which is May THE TIMES is not responsible for any opinions expressed by correspondents was made quietly by the board and It **on °* the Southern Oregon Medical appearing in its columns. came as a complete surprise as the association. board when the case came up several Tticre promises to be a very active weeks ago declined to act favorably street campaign in Eugene this sum- ORRIN E. STANLEY Entered m Postoffice at Portland, Oregon, as second class matter. on the case, postponing it for several n,er- The city council has ordered M. A a So«, c E months. | three miles of streets paved and there EN G IN E ERIN G A D V IS E R D R A F T IN G • A FEABLBBS EXPONENT OF INDUSTRIAL PEACE The conditions of the parole for Mor- »re petitions in for another mile, AN D B L U E P R IN T IN G . ris. as recommended, are attached to Representation in the legislature the requirement that his friends p ro based on the population as shown by 1 Telephone JtmkaU tsss. SUBSCRIPTION RATES—#2.50 per year, in advanc^. duce a *25«J bond. The sole reason for the 1910 census is proposed by the Chimb-r «( Ccrn; • r r i i o i Ow,-. -- thls bond is to indemnify the state People’s Power league. This idea is ADVERTISING RATES made known upon application. against any possible violation of the incorporated In the measure to be sub- parole by Morris. The board believes mitted to the voters of the state « r TI7TT G O V Saturday, May 25, 1912 that the $250 would be sufficient to More than 200 persons, representa- pay the expenses of returning him to 1 fives of threshing machine concerns COMMERCIAL ARTIST AND the prison in case he proved recreant »nd others interested in grain farming THE CLOSED SHOP CRISIS CARTOONIST. to his trust. ; in Oregon will attend the fourth an- j It appears that the indietment o f fifty-four unionists for complicity nual convention of the Oregon State Portland. Or,¿or in over one hundred dynamite outrages, averaging over one death in Old Ditch Filled and Klamath Objects Threshers' Association, which meets 315 S,WI- Klamath Palls.—Water has again at Condon Thursday and Friday, caeh ease, r«-sts upon evidence obtained from forty thousand letters F. W. Waters, representing the passing between officials of the unions implicated, and seized at the been turned into the old Ankeny ditch by the government. Last year the Welch railroad Interests which recent- union headquarters. That sueh things should happen in,America in canal was condemned by the city ly purchased the Salem street car sys- In cre a se Y o u r B u sin e ss this century challenges credulity. Nothing in war is more shocking health officer, and it Is expected that tem, announces that his company is by placing roar advertisement in than the planting o f mines. Bullets kill combatants, but mines slay some action will be taken to get the preparing to expend not less than $3,- THE TIMES. miscellaneously, and these mines were planted where they could not canal closed this year. The negotia I 000,000 in extension and development Write for our advertising rates. tions to accomplish this have been of the1- lines in and about Salem. avoid injuring non-combatants. Neither the capitalists nor the non- pending or three years. With a view to eliminating saloons unionists whose lives and property suffered were engaged in any war ; from the Oregon Electric depot at Jef fare upon the unions. They were engaged in rearing structures o f uni ferson sWeer, Portland, Railroad Com Sanitarium May Rise at Tolman Ashland.- -Minneapolis capitalists missioner Miller directed Attorney- versal benefit; and they were slain or maimed as though they were public enemies. In order to learn who really were the enemies o f the are contemplating the erection of a I General Crawford to look up the law- modern sanitarium at Tolman Springs, on the subject, and should he find that public interests, instead of soldiers o f the common weal, as is their about 14 miles east of this city. The It Is possible, he will bring a suit. boast, it is necessary to understand the nature of the delusion which place at present is the mountain home Positive assurance is given that the alone can explain without excusing the hideous crimes which some of M. G. Lawrence of this city, and Eugene-Coos Bay railroad will be body has committed. If the savages who are responsible for these has been used as a sort of private re bull! at once, with construction com treat. It is designed to erect on the mencing from the Marshfield end. The crimes— whether those under arrest or any others—shall finally be McArthur-Perks contracting company property h $ 200,000 institution. convicted and punished, much will have been accomplished. It will he ------------------------------- and Porter Brothers have secured the THK TIMES D IR E C T O R Y ay :« Thu move urday tor the .*entyam » a n u a i 0 f P ortland's L ea d in g Business Firms. J. H. MORTON, M. E. INDUSTRIAL ENOINEER. Designs Complete Industrial Plants or any component part, mechanical or structural. Old Plants Modernized. Drafting. Phone Main 1622. 924 Chamber o f Commerce, Portland, Oregon. ARTHUR D. MONTEITH CIVIL AND HYDRAULIC ENGINEER. General Surveying, Landscape Engineering, Construction Superintendence, Reports and Estimates on Projects, Wat« r Supply, Irri gation, Sewerage. Phones: Main 5645. Res. Phone E 6185. Lumber Exchange Building. Phone East 63. U. S. LAUNDRY CO. 130 GRAND AVE., COR. EAST YAMHILL, Portland, Oregon. Snowy White Dainty Clothes Are Troy Laundered Clothes a greater accomplishment if the by-product o f the outrages shall be a GRANGE AGAINST SINGLE TAX oon,r:ict irom ,hf' 3outhern !>aci«c- ________ That the Harriman interests will general understanding of the nature of the «dosed shop, which is the objective of all the trades-union outrages, whose number surpasses West’s Road Bills are Also Fought build a rallr° a(l up the South Santiam and Order Will Support its Own. '»Hey from Lebanon to a point above any exact knowle«lge or statement. Roseburg —After wrangling the Foster this summer Is indicated by the If the elifsed shop shall he established, no man can earn wages with greater part of one day over U’Ren’s fiIins ia the c«unty clerk’s office at out a jinion license, and the union is under no necessity to grant the pro-single tax resolution, which was Albany of a copy of a resolution auth license. The right to live includes the right to earn a living. Work defeated, the state grange closed its orizing the construction of the line. Bell, Wildman & Co., a Portland for the unemployed is one of the first demands of the unions upon the labors Saturday. The grange is opposed to Governor , firm, has been awarded the contract society which they condemn and propose to improve by their own West's road plans and the Pacific for constructing the $50,000 storage methods. An«l yet the unions would deny that right to any except Highway; is opposed to the consolida plant of the National Apple company their own members. That is to say, the right to live would depend tion of the state university and agri at Iloud River. The plant will be 80 not only upon univeraal law, but upon compliance with union stand- cultural college; is in favor of equal by 100 feet, four stories, and will have suffrage; Is in favor of building good a caPad ty of 120,000 boxes of apples. anls and bearing of union burdens. The man unable or unwilling to A new coal mine, which it is claimed roads by bonding, provided that home comply with the union requirement yould he a social pariah, possess rule be applied in fixing th# highways will be the best ever opened in the ing only th«- right to starve.' Let nobody imagine that this is some to be improved. The grange is also in Coos Bay country, is to be developed thing which concern^ only ironworkers. Whoever buys anything favor of taking state institutions out at once by a new company which has been formed with C. A. Smith at the f a r in g a union label subscribes to the theory of the closed shop. of politics. There were four days of active dis head. The mine is on Isthmus Inlet Tlie merrhant who nubmits to sell su«-h articles bows his neck to th cussion by the grange. During the and it Is estimated that there are 1,- yoke. The master of a million mimls has decreed that open-shop ar meeting each of the great problems l}°0.000 tons above water level tielea shall not he bought, gold, or transported, in inter-State com- before the people of the state was tak- I schedule Is out for the merce, and is now evading punishment for criminal contempt o f conrfr m “ p *nd fully discussed. | twentieth annual session of the south ____________________ j ern Oregon Chautauqua assembly, in insisting upon this as a matter of conscience. lie is unahle t ap Doene Boye, Alleged Thieve», Caught whlch wli* continue for 11 days, be preciate th«* enormity of his offense against non-unionists heeause lie Pendleton.—Piez and Bascum Doane, ginning with July 2. The program will labors under the delusion that whatever is go«sl for any unionist is brothers who recently, it is alleged, embrace musical attractions, lectures, good for everybody. Cases like his «-all for for heroic remededies. drove away a band of sheep belonging readings and sermons, some of the Nothing is suggi'steil here worse than a general appreciation of the to John Wynne, a McKay creek ranch- | foremost talent coming from beyond er. sheared them, sold the wool and es- j A t l a n t i c . ni«‘aning of the closed shop, which in its essence, and as practiced, caped. have been arrested at Elgin as 1 Congressman Hawley has been ad- surpasses in cold-h)oo<i<*d malice ami oppression o f the needy ami the they rode In from their trip across the' vi*ed that an appropriation of $225,000 i tor the reimbursement of settlers of ! innocent the dynamite outrages themselves. At worst there were only mountains. --------------------------I Sherman county who were compelled I a hiimired of them, and only a humlred or so were slain. The Hood River Berries Ripe. 1° abandon lands because of The ; closed shop principle affects scores of millions. Hood River.—The first crate of Dalles military road grants, has been It is a political outrage that there should be ohstaeh-s to any man s yocxl River strawberries was shipped agreed upon by the house claims com- realization of his own plans for an honest livelihood. The economic Saturday. The crate came from the . mittee. and will be reported with the I wrong on the community is eijtially offensive, and can lie translated patch of Gus Filler and was consigned i next omnibus claims bill. Although the law passed by the peo ! into facts of easy understanding. Bricklayers used to work ten hours to Manager Bower« of the Multnomah hotel, who paid $10 for it. j pie in 1910 provided that necessary ex for .+.'{.<1(1 or $4.00, and lay upward of 2.(HMt bricks. The trade is ■ penses of delegates to national conven “ closed” now, ami wages are $2.00 higher for two hours’ less work. Dayton Votes New City Charter. tions up to $200 should be paid by the Dayton.—The special election to state, the last legislature failed to B< hold what the union has done for th«- poor bricklayer, and remark also that the bricks 1 ai<I in the shorter day for the higher wage ar«' vote on the proposed new city charter | make a specific appropriation for this fewer by half. This simply starts an endless chain of higher cost. in- i was held Saturday and a very light purpose, and the delegates will have j vote was cast, there being 43 in favor to await the mercy of the next legis .'lu.lmg higher rent. the great.st single burden upon living, next t«»|,nd 31 Rgalnlt thp proposal lature before they recelre their money j fuoil. Carpenters usi-d to hang a door in an hour -eight or ten a day. The government ts again taking up The shops are closed now, and four doors a day are a full output. BR IEF NEWS OF OREGON the fight against the small beetles When the structural iron shops were closed scarcely one hundred that have been ravaging the forests The Haines water system has been of eastern Oregon. This year, how rivets would he driven in a day. The dynamite outrages were the Completed. result o f the proof that 200 to 4tH( rivets could he driven in a day by ever. the official in charge of the work Asa iloladay, a well known pioneer workers glad of tin* chance, if they were not murder«*«! at the job. of 1853, is dead at Scappoose, aged 84 expects to have a much easier task than last season, when more than Carry these figures through all the trades, and whoever complains years. $15,000 was expended in the war o* of the «'ost of living can see what the closed shop means to him. It is The annual Lincoln county Fair and the little insects. proclaimed in the name of human uplift, and is the synonym for sloth Festival will be held at Toledo August The exhibits for prizes In Linn coun 20 to 23. anil inefficiency and cost o f living beyond endurance, even if free ty's first industrial school fair will be Superintendent of Banks Wright shown both at Albany and at Sclo. labor he permitted. 1 has appointed H. K. Albert as state The school fair will be held first at The closed shop is ineonsisteil with th fundamental principles of bank examiner, Albany on August 23 and 24 and then humanity and of our system of government. If anybody prefers the I The senate has confirmed the nora- the entire exhibit will be taken to system o f government by trades uniimisin. now is the time to proclaim ' lna,lori of ">illiam E. Tate to be post- Scio and made a part of the Linn » , . . .. . , , , . i I master at Wasco, county fair, which will be held this ins preference and tosiipport the idea • >t an imliistnal commission to ,,, ... „„„ , , . ■ . , . , , , , , .. , . . , , Of the 298 pupils who took the state d. len.l the righ ts o f th.* meek and s u ffe r in g ad vocate* o f the closed | eighth grade examinations in Linn shop. New York Times. county last week 133 passed. ---------------------------------------------- Out of the 109 children of the Hood River valley who. took the eighth .or i protection of the watershed of . . . . . ___ . grade examinations, but 42 passed. »he l'orilami water supply ___ _ Portland folk so far have contribut . _ . , . ~~1 *d $44:!.25 toward the fund f,,r the re- Roseburg Festival Great Succes# |1(>, (lf 3.000,000 starving people in lioseburg.—Roseburg s fourth an- China. •ual strawberry carnival came to an ! Former Cashier James Evars, of the Events Occurring Throughout ind here with a masked carnival, at j which everybody was permitted to go delve no clemency from the state pa the State During the Past nearly ns far as he liked with amuse- j role board. nn nis. and gaiety reigned supreme. | Week. Frank Allen, insane, ringleader in With grange " “ the ' - ' state A K 'iiR V x convention, t'U » x-ui it'll, t the ur _ „ , , c. . 8>*utlient Oregon Medical .M ocl.tlon ,h.e *“ >« asylum for the insane recently, has Bull Run Guarded From Fore*t Fire* convention auil the strawberry carni been deported. Portland.—Taking heed from th© val nil on here. Roseburg passed a There has probably not been a time forest fir© which started several day* most exciting week _______ during the past 20 years when the ago on Clear Creek, about 12 mil©» ranges of Drain countv were in as west of th© summit of Mount Hood I MORRIS MAY GET FREEDOM good condition as the present time. ind destroyed much \nluald© timber It is probable that the lllthee club. »nd a number of th© home» of pet < Parole Board Asks That Portland „ f Salem, organised 25 years ago and ilera. arrang©ment» have been made Banker bs Released. wMch has played a promlnem part In by the federal authorities and the city Salem —Whether W. Cooper Morris ,he -oclal life of the capital, will dls water department for a ©areful patrol of Cortland, convicted for embeixle j band. of the borders of the Hull Hun reserve ment In connection wtih the fallur# of | The state railroad commission has OREGON NEWS NOTES OF GENERAL INTEREST named June 18 aa the date for a hear- year on August 28 to 30 inclusive. It has been discovered that a Linn county man. Ringo Butler, of Halsay, was among those lost in the wreck of the Titanic. Butler had written from England to friends in Halsey that he expected to return on the Titanic, but through some oversight his name did not appear in most of the lists of pas sengers which were published after the disaster. A Business Victim. '•Does * you 'member dat .........." dawg ........... K * I used have!" asked Mr. Erastus Tlnkley Yea," replied Cncle Rasberry. “ You means dat mixed dog?” “ He was kind o' mixed. He was what I calls a black an'-tan dale ter rier. Well, sub, dat dawg aiu’ brought me uuffin' bat bad luck. I gold lm to a man foh two doliabs. an' de two dol- lahs he slipped me were counterfeit." “ Whut you gineter do?" “ Whut kin I do? If 1 shows 'lm any 1 way to prove Ue transaction was unle- gal he's gineter make me take de dawg back.” —Washington Star. If we could take you through our modern plant, flooded with sunshine and scrupulously clean, with its immaculately dressed workers; if we could show you how thoroughly each gar ment is laundered and inspectedour close atten tion to the small details that really make the laundered garment and some o f the refreshing ly white, snowy clothes that leave this laundry —you would not hesitate long in sending your clothes here. f A single trial will prove a revelation in how clothes really should be laundered. A phone call will bring our wagon the same day. EAST 33— BOTH PHONES— B-6118. “ You Can Depend On the Troy.’ ’ Troy Laundry Co. 201 EAST WATER STREET. What Doe the SeJairyßsig Hold fo rY O U ? Yes, that is a personal question, a very personal question—one that affects your whole life; and yet you would thank us for asking it if you knew what an immense power for betterment we could be to you and your salary. To draw a small salary month after month, year after year, is your own fault. It is pure negligence and nothing else, for there is an institution that is ever ready to enable you to rise to the highest, l*~t paying posl- tions in the profession of your choice—no matter how poor y.,ur <ii< urn- stances may be, how old or how young you are, no matter where you live. And to prove this the I. C. S. points to hundreds of thousand. .,f other men who have secured advancement and success through the I i S. plan; to hundreds of others in worse circumstances than you a r e whose stones of advancement read like romance; to a growth from a mere idea with one Course of Instruction to one of the largest educational lu.lilu- tions in existence with 2C$ C -urse. of Instruction, backe.l by , ,,,„ a| ,,f six million dollars, and a total enrolment far in excess of any other «al lege—a growth made possible only as the result of success in its b u s i n e s s —and the business of this place is to raise salaries. Without doubt this plan is the most practical, the quickest, easiest, and cheapest way in the world for YOU to secure a better position and increased earnings. It puts .......................... ...................... you under no obligation whatever . Intrmational (orrrsnondriirr Schools to send us this coupon and allow our experts to explain our system - -----:urinet '»■•‘ •’ F *°» • l»rr**r ••lary • l l .i r y m an i l • ¿ .It .!# an «»»ri**«» W N M pM M n r rc w h ic h 1 I h ------ m arke«! _ X » tu ra i of instruction, and adapt a Course h ave to your personal needs. A J ▼ rft e r A r c h it e c ’ l D ra ft s m a n S*iow-Card Vrîter S t r u c t u r a l I r.K in e e r Do you really want to earn » ? Jo w T rim m e r S t r u c t u r a l D ra ft s m a n C i v il S e rv ic e l ïa m s . C o n t ra c to r A B u ild e r more salary? Would you like tho O rn a m e n ta l D e s ig n e r F o re m a n P lu m b e r 'JeCianicaJ Enfineer C i v il E n g in e e r salary bag to yield you more each M e ch a n ica l D r a f t s . P . R . C o n . E n g in e e r Foreman Machinist S u rv e y o r week or month? Then make a r le e r - t e a l E n g in ee r M in in g E n g in e e r F e e rH d a n C h e m is t definite attempt to bring thi* P o w e » . Station S o r t . Bookkeeper A rc h ite c t S te n o g ra p h e r about by sending in this coupon. Tomorrow never comes. Do it today. • . S l'e e t end Se, ------ Stete . > • 2 H. H. Harris, Manager, 409 McKay Bldg., Portland