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About The times. (Portland, Or.) 191?-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 22, 1912)
THE TIMES IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MULTNOMAH COUNTY. Ida May 8tockwell, Defendant.» VB- > SUMMONS Calvin W. Stockwell, Plaintiff,? I n the Name of the S ta t e of Or ego n: You ar e h e r e b y r eq u i r ed to a n s w e r the co m p la i n t filed ag a in s t you in the above e n ti tle d ac tio n w it h i n six we eks from the dat a of the p u b li ca ti on of th is summons, an d if yo u fail to so a n s w e r the p la in ti f f will a p p ly to the abo ve en t it l ed co ur t f o r the r e lief de m an de d in p l a i n t i f f 's com plaint, to- wit: F o r a dec ree of div or ce disso lvi ng the b o n d s of m a tr im o n y ex ist in g b et w e en p l a i n ti f f an d d e f e n d a n t a n d for such o th e r an d f u r t h e r relief as to the co ur t m a y seem j u s t a n d equitable. T h i s sum mo ns is s er ve d up o n you b y p u b lic at io n by o r d e r of the Hon. J . P. Kava- na ug h, J u d g e of th e Ci r c u it Cour t of the S t a t e of Oregon, w hic h o r d e r of p ubl ic at ion is d a t e d th e 2 3 d da y of May, 1912, a n d d i r e c t s t h a t this s u m m on s be s er ve d upo n you by bei ng p u bl i sh e d once each w ee k for a p er io d of six con se cut ive w ee k s in “ Th e T i m e s , ” a n e w s p a p e r of ge ne ral cir cul at ion w i t h i n M u lt n o m a h County, Oregon. H A R O L D A. W I L K I N S , A tto r ne y for p la int if f. D a te of f i r s t pu bl ic at io n, M ay 27, 1912. D a te of la s t publi cat ion , J u l y 1, 1912. IN THE C O U N TY C OUR T O F T H E S T A T E O R EG O N . F O R T H E C OUNTY O F M U LTN O M A H . OF In the M atter of the Estate of R E B E C C A F. P O R T E R , Deceased. N otice is hereby given t h a t th e u n d ersig n e d , J i« e |ih P o rte r, h as been ap p o in ted by th e C ounty C o u rt o f th e S ta te of Oregon, fo r th e C ounty of M u ltn o m a h , ex e cu to r of th e la s t w ill a n d te sta m e n t of R ebecca F . P o rte r, deceased, a n d h a s d u ly q u a li fied as such. A ll persons hav in g c la im s a g a in st s a id e s ta te are hereb y n o tified to p resen t th e sam e to th e u n d e r signed, a t th e oltiee of P a u l M. Long a n d C h rls- to p h erso n & M atth ew s, 415-17 Y’eon B u ild in g , P o r t la n d , Oregon, w ith pro p e r vouchers a n d du ly veri fied. w ith in six m o n th s from th e d a te of th e first p u b lic a tio n of th is notice. JO S E P H P O R T E R , E xecutor. P A U L M. LON G an d CH R IS T O l’H E R S O N & M A T T H E W S , 415-17 Yeon B ld g , A tto rn ey s fo r E xecutor. D a te of first p u b lic a tio n . M ay IS th . 1912. D a te o f la s t p u b lic a tio n . J u n e 15th, 1912. IN T H E CO UN TY C O U R T O F T H E S T A T E O F OREGON. F OR T H E CO UN TY OF M UL TN OM A H. I n th e m a t t e r of th e es ta te of R o s al e n da A1 m i r a Math ew s, deceased* Notice is h e r e b y given t h a t t h e u nd e r s ig n e d aas been ap p o i n te d by th e abo ve en t it l ed Court a d m i n i s t r a t o r of th e e s ta te of R o s al e nd a A l m i r a M att hew s, deceased. All p er s o n s h av in g cla im s a g a in s t th e e s ta te of s ai d dece as ed are h e r e b y r eq u i r e d to p r e s e n t th e same, w i t h the p r o p e r vou chers, to th e u n d e r s ig n e d a t 447 E a st S t a r k stree t, P or tla nd , Oregon, w it h in six m o n t h s fr om th e d a t e of th e f ir s t pu b li ca ti o n hereof. O. R. M A T T H E W S , , A d m in i s t r a to r . C hr is to p h e r so n & Matthows, A tt o r n e y s fo r A dm in is tr at o r . D a t e of f ir s t publ ic at ion , u n e 1, 1912. D a te of la s t pu bl ic at io n, J u u e 29, 1912. CITATION. In the County Court of the State of Oregon, for Multnomah County. In the matter of the estate of Lewis X. Bissonnett, deceased. To Alice M. Bissonnett Ernest E. Bis- sonnett, Eva A. Weaver, Hattie Montgomery, Clara Provaneha, Rose Brockway, Alma Bissonnett, Henry Peek and all other heirs and devisees of Lewis X. Bissonnett, deceased, unknown or known: In the name of the State of Oregon: You are hereby commanded to appear before the honorable County Court of the State of Oregon, in and for the County of Multnomah, at the court house, m the City of Portland, on 23rd day of July, 1912, at the hour of 9 A. M. of said day to show cause, if any exist, why an order should not be made by the above-entitled court authorizing and directing V. A. Brewer, the ad ministrator of the above-entitled es tate, to sell the east half of lots 12 and 13, block 3, Vernon Addition to Port land, Multnomah County, Oregon, at private sale for cash. Witness my hand and the seal of said Court aflixed this loth day of June, 1912. F. S. FIELDS, L. D. MAHOXE, County Clerk. Attorney for Estate, 513-14-15 Couch Bldg. formers toward politicians of the Louisiana led all other states In old school is a Pharisaic attitude of number of wage earners, 46,072, and condemnation, as if those gentle Washington ranked first for value of men had been guilty of personal products. $89,154,825. and value added unrighteousness in being what by manufacture, $52,275,954. they were. Mr. Croly, in writing the life of “ Mark” Hanna, sees Brief News of the Week the falsity of this attitude. Marcus Hanna certainly did A strike of the union members of stand for what we now call priv the building trades has been called in ilege, but Mr. Croly shows us that Los Angeles. he did not deliberately choose it Desultory fighting during the past after seeing a vision of privilege on week, with no particular advantage the one hand and purity and dem to either side, marked the progress of ocracy on the other hand. To him the Mexican revolution. no such vision was granted. He The rebels at Chihuahua decided to was a product of contemporary confiscate all the cattle of the famous conditions. “ Only one explana Terrazas family. This will add $1,000,- tion will account for his peculiar 000 to their depleted treasury. success. He must have embodied Both houses of the Minnesota legis in his own life and purposes some lature have ratified the amendment to vital American social and economic the constitution providing for the di tradition which gave his personal rect election of United States senators. ity, individual as it was, more than Irish suffragettes ran amuck in Dub an individual meaning and im lin and shattered 42 windows in the pulse.” This tradition, thinks Mr. postoffice, customs house and commis Croly, was that of the pioneer. sioner’s office and the police and mili In a little pamphlet entitled, “ The Church and the Working- man” (Golden Rule Publishing Co., Nashua, N. H., price 10 cents), the Rev. Edgar F. Blanchard finds that the underlying purpose of the Mosaic Poor Laws and of the early Christian church was “ to preveut destitution and distress, rather than to help people as objects of charity after they had come to dis tress” ; and prophesies that the new church soon to appear will be “ a Religious Brotherhood—a relig ious system organized on positive ethical and fraternal principles.” Fro mthis combination of lodge, labor union and church, the work ingman will not stay away. NEWS FROM OUR NATIONAL CAPITAL House Would Do Away With Land Office Receivers and Give Work to Clerk. Washington.—Unless the senate amends the sundry civil bill and re- Itores the old order of things, receiv ers of local land offices will pass Into history June JO. The house commit tee on appropriations, in framing the sundry civil bill, abolished the office of receiver and transferred the duties of that office to the register. This ^as in accordance with the recom mendation that has been made many times by the general land office. Representatives from the public land states fought in vain In the house against the provisions of the bill re lating to the land service. The resolu tion to abolish the offices of receivers of public money and substitute the appointment of chief clerks for land offices went through under a sharp fire. Charges that special land agents abused their positions failed to cut the appropriation of $500,000 to prosecute depredations. Chairman Fitzgerald, of the appropriation committee, de fended the bill against attacks led by Fame-Seekers, by Alice Woods. Representatives Mondell, Hawley, and $1.20. Illustrated. George H Burke. Disagree Over Rivers And Harbors. Doran Co., New York City. With illustrations by May Wil The conference committee on the son Preston, this attractive novel river and harbor bill is deadlocked depicts with cleverness an Amer and after a spirited row adjourned for ican artist-story of Bohemian 10 days. Threats are being made by house members that the whole bill will Paris, known and Trilby Land. The Under Trail, by Anna Alice be defeated unless the senate recedes Chapin. $1.25. Uustrated. Lit on some of Its larger amendments. One amendment which brought tle, Brown & Co., Boston. Hate, love and a secret crosscut about a serious disagreement was the trail in the Virginia Mountains senate's increase in the appropriation make up this attractive novel of for the Celilo canal from $600,000 to the Southland. The characters $800,000. The house conferees are in sisting that they will not stand (or are exceedingly well drawn. Beggars and Scorners, by Allan this increase, but senate members of MeAulay. $1.25. John Yane the conference insist that this and all other increases are Justified by the Co., New York City. An historical novel well worth recommendations of the army engin reading—harking back to the tri eers, and that no increases have been uniphs won in a similar depart made that were not recommended by ment by Charles Major -depicting the war department. the struggles, intrigues, loves and It is understood that none of the northwestern amendments is at bates of Scotch Jacobite exiles in other tacked by the house, Celilo being the Holland, after the memorable bat largest increase made in that section. tie of Culloden in Scotland in Committee Will Investigate Hanford. 1745, when the English army, un By unanimous vote the house di dcr the Duke of Cumberland, rected a sub-committee of the Judici smashed the hopes of Bonnie ary committee to go to Seattle, Wash., Prince Charlie and his adherents and other places to Investigate the The Mission of Victoria Wilhel charges against Judge Hanford, of the mina, by Jeanne Bartholow Ma- federal bench, which have arisen from goun. $1. B. W. Huebsch. New his decision in the Olsson socialist cit York City. izenship case. Told with singular pathos, this Chairman Clayton named the follow Story of a young girl’s experiences ing sub-committee to go to Seattle: in New York City, and in the form Representatives Graham, Illinois, of a diary depicts how she met chairman; Higgina, of Connecticut, the inevitable man. was deceived and McCoy of Xew Jersey. by him and went wrong.” He wes Timber Industry Ranks Third. her employer. A baby came, who Lumber and timber manufacturers died shortlv after she was born rank third in value among the pro airl was named after the present <juctg 0f the industries of the United Queen of Spain and the Queen of gtategi according to the 1912 statistic* Holland. As the title of the little mm]*? public by Direcfor Durand, book indicates, this publication , The census figures show that there strives to fulfill a mission, and wgre 40,671 lumber and timber es- ought to serve as a terrible warn tabliahments and 784,989 persona en- niif It may. and may D ai. paged in the industry. M arcus Alonzo H anna : H is L ife The value of products ^ r e $1,156,- and Work. By Herbert Croly «6,747. The value added by manu- With portrait. The Macmillan j facture, which i* the difference be- Co. $2.50 net. tween cost of materials and value of The attitude of too many re- product», wa» $«4$.oiH6» tary barracks. Thousands were rendered homeless In Louisiana, following the breaking if every protection levee from Labad- »ille to the Gulf of Mexico, a distance of 90 miles. In Chicago recently cattle sold at the highest price ever recorded In the history of the stockyards. Predictions imong cattle buyers are that if the Iresent high prices continue the con sumer will pay even more for his meats. Senator Stone of Missouri has de clared that friends of Speaker Clark will support a resolution before the democratic national convention abol ishing the two-thirds rule and provid ing that whenever any candidate re ceives a majority of the votes cast he shall be declared the party nominee oommlttee has ordered a reduction of from 11 to 12 cents per 100 pounds in class rates one to four, inclusive, on traffic over the Southern Pacific from Medford to Dunsmuir, Cal., and inter vening points. Hood River will vote on the issue of $90,000 worth of bonds for the purpose of constructing a municipal water sys tem to take the place of the system recently purchased by the city from the Pacific Power & Light company, which has been found inadequate to supply the needs of the town. A. program replete in lectures by prominent authorities upon subjects teeming with Interest to the mothers and teachers of Oregon, was announc ed by Professor Joseph Schafer, di rector of the summer school, for the Mothers’ Congress, which is to be held at the university on July 2 and 3. President Crooks of Albany college announces that $100,000 has been se cured to insure a $250,000 endowment fund for the institution. James J. Hill has offered the college $50,000 upon condition that it secures an addi tional $200,000. The campaign for the additional $100,000 will proceed active ly- United States District Attorney Mc- Court has filed a suit in the United States district court in the name of the government against Willard N. Jones to recover $133,000. alleged to be the value of nine claims in the Stietz fcdian reservation that came into the possession of Jones by fraudulent means. Announcement has just been made by the Brooks-Robertson and Scanlon- Gipson companies, holders of millions of feet of central Oregon timber, that a mill to cost $1,000,000 will be built at Bend, construction to start within 18 months. The plant will have a min imum payroll of $25,000 a month, em ploying 500 men. Phone or Write Government^ Standard P o w d ers C om p an y OF PORTLAND And Have an Expert Explain Our Money Maker Main 6383 90 First Street OREGON ( Ö E E n g r a v in g company BRIEF NEWS OF OREGON DEMOCRATS WILL NOT FIGHT ON CHAIRMAN The senate has confirmed the nomi nation of J. R. Woodford as postmas ter at Medford. The 40th annual reunion of the Ore --------- ( gon Pioneer Association was held in Baltimore, Md.—Adherents of Speak Portland Thursday. The annual meeting of the Clatsop er Clark for the presidential nomina County Sunday School Association tion made it known they would make no fight on the temporary chairman was held at Astoria. Mabel Miller has been nominated as ship and that any man worthy of the postmaster at Jacksonville, succeed office would be agreeable to them. It was said here that Alton B. Park lng John F. Miller, whose term expir er was a likely candidate for the tem ed. Crops throughout the Klamath coun porary chairmanship of the Democrat try will be better this year than ever ic national convention, with Represen before in the history of that part of tative James, of Kentucky, next strongest. the country. A movement for Governor Foss was Struck by the Shasta Limited trav eling at 30 miles an hour, Mrs. Mary launched by Frank Hendrick, of New Shepherd, of Oregon City, was thrown York, who said that Governor Foss’ platform was the immediate reduction 16 feet and instantly killed. Articles of incorporation for the Sil of the tariff and reciprocity with Can ver Falls Timber company, with $6,- ada. Senator Gore, of Oklahoma will sec 000,000 capital, were filed at Salem. The principal plaoe of business 1 b Port ond the nomination at the Baltimore convention of Governor Woodrow Wil land. Heavy rains in eastern Oregon have son, of New Jersey, which will be done much damage to growing crops. made by John Westcott, of Camden, Cloudbursts have added to the trouble N. J. and railroads have suffered severely $10,000 Prize Taken by Garros. from washed out tracks. Angers.—Roland Garros, the French The bureau of statistics of the de aviator, won the grand prize of avia partment of agriculture reports that tion. The prize was given by the crop conditions are particularly favor French Aero Club and was worth $10,- able In Oregon, the composite condi 000. The distance covered was 683 tion of all crops being 108.5. miles. The directors of the Clackamas Southern railway bare enlered Into THE MARKETS. contract with Archie Mason of Port land to make the grade and build the Portland. bridges between Oregon City and Mo- Wheat—Track prices: Club, 90c; lalla. bluestem, 95c; red Russian, 90c. A stay of execution has been grant Oats—No. 1 White, $40 per ton. ed in the cases of Charles and George Hay—Timothy. $17; alfalfa, $12. Humphreys, sentenced to death for Butter—Creamery, 27c. the murder of Mrs. Elizabeth Griffith Eggs—Ranch, 20c. of Philomath. The case has gone to Hops—1911 crop, 35c contracts, the supreme court on appeal. 23c. Dr. J. Dillon Plamondon, who was Wool—Eastern Oregon 18c; WII- dispossessed of the position of super lamette valley. 22c. intendent at the Eastern Oregon Branch Insane Asylum, has made ap Seattle. plication to members of the state Wheat—Bluestem, 95c; Club, 90c; board to be reinstated in that position. red Russian. 89c. The Klamath Falls Commercial club Oats—$39 per ton. has started a movement to build up Butter—Creamery, 27c. the credit of the city, which is below Eggs—21c. par. The administration is in a bad Hay—Timothy, $17 per ton. way on account of the legal tangle following the adoption of two charters. Pelican Lodge, the 1140 acre sum BLUE SKY LAW OPPOSED mer home and fishing and hunting re treat of the late E. H. Harriman, on 8alem People Against New Commie- Upper Klamath lake was transferred I • lon and More Power for Governor, by Mrs. Harriman to the Fleischacker | Salem.—Contending that Blue Sky Interests. The price was not divulged, law, a measure which it Is proposed to A co-operative meat-packing plant ‘ Initiate at the coming election, and to provide consumers in Portland and 1 which has for Ita object the regulation San Francisco with meat and meat of corporations and the creation of a products at wholesale prices was corporation department for the pur launched this week In Ashland, by a pose, means but the saddling of anoth number of prominent capitalists of er commission on the people and their southern Oregon. taxation in an Indirect manner to A tour of Coos county is to be made maintain it, a number of people prom- this month by Professors H. S. Jack- inent In state affairs here have sign!- son and H. F. Wilson of the entomol- fle<$ their Intention of actively oppos ogy department of the Oregon Agri- ing It and predict that when the peo- cultural college, accompanied by F. C. pie are made thoroughly acquainted Reimer, superintendent of the new with the measure, they will vote It southern Oregon experiment station, down at the polls. Frank Spillman, a rancher, aged 30, | The main objection urged agalnat is under arreet charged with the at- the bill is that It means the creation tempted murder of Charles Klrkpat- ' of another commission, and additional rick, who was shot on the night of taxation for its support, incidental June 4, while walking on the street at thereto Is the minor objection that it Bazer with Miss BirdJe Rusk. Spill- gives the governor more poser in that man was a former sweetheart of Miss the law provides that the corporation Rusk. commissioner shall be appointed by Baaed on the showing of Medford him. and hold office during his pleas- merchanta, the interstate commerce tire. BAGGAGE STORED THREE DAYS FREE THE Baggage & Omnibus Transfer Co. General Transfering and Storage Main Office and Warehouse PARK AND DAVIS STS., PORTLAND Telephones: Main 6980, A 3322 S U B S C R I B E FOR TH E TIMES Send in Your Subscription today THE TIMES COMPANY, 212J First Street, Portland, Ore. Find enclosed $2.50, for which please send m< THE TIMES for one year and until otherwise ordered. Nam e____ Street No. City State