X Wralö DHL LENTS STATION, PORTLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY, Subscription, 11.50 the Year. VOL XX, No 34 AUGUST 25 1922 X OREGON NEWS NOTES MOUNT SGOTT IMPROVEMENTS APPEAR LOGAL HAPPENINGS PORTLAND PRESS PUSSYFOOTING" ON KU KLUXISM SAYS SALEM EDITOR OF GENERALIINTEREST Mr. and Mm. Grover and Mr. Brown This to an Important wook for Mount sioners. the City of Portland and the are camping In eastern Oregon. committee from Mount Scott, relativt bcolt district. Fueler Road was <>|>rnod D. R. Haoimach of Salem was in to the paving of Powell Valley Road to traffic from Seventy second street Ismta Tuesday looking for hoppick­ between Fiftieth street and Twenty­ to Sixty-fifth (treat. Blds for the sixth street. The city Is asking the ers for hia 70-acre field. N. Taylor came in the other day constiuctlon of the I ante trunk «ewer county to pave 18 feet of the road from Oklahoma and was employed by were opened Wednesday and City and then turn the road over to the C. H. Chambreau to drive his Stutz. ■ Commiaaioner Barbur'» office will rec city for maintenance. If this road is Dr. W. O. Colburn of Lincoln, Neb., paved the extra dirt will be used to pm mend the acceptance of the J. F. Hhca company'« bid of »693,000. Two fill at the site of the Thlrtyeecond- Dr. C- U. Moore's daughter and niece, were visitor’s at the Baby clinic last other bid«, one for 9719,000 and the streat bridge. week. It will bo about two months before other for $69’iJX)0 were received. G. C. Lovelace sold the Pastime The city eommlaaloner'a office also any more of Footer Road la opened Poo broom last Friday to Fred Kieaer to traffic and at that time it is thought will recommend that the partial pay­ of Portland who took charge last ment plan bo used, aa the bid ie »30,- the entire road will be open, from Saturday. Eighty-second street to Fiftieth and 000 less for thia sort uf payment liian Russel's Sweet Shop of Kern Park for the lump sum payment. The Powell Valley Road. Th<- Portland is remodeling a room directly north •ewer will follow Johnson creea to Railway, Light A Power company is of the Iwach building, for their new the proposed tunnel at Harney ave­ working at the cut-off through the location. nue. Eighteen months will be allowed McGowan estate property at Fiftieth J. H. Goeser, stepfather of Mrs. and Powell Valley Road. The new the contractors to finish the newer. Chester Pierce, Lenta’ librarian, died Negotiations are now being con­ Foster Road will follow the railway Munday. The funeral was held duct«« I betwren the county commie- tracks through this wooded stretch. Wednesday. Mrs. Lottie Gilbert, 4928 Seventy- TRIO OF SERIOUS ACCIDENTI» first street, who recently returned from the hospital, is rapidly recover- A trio of aenoua accajenta has hap­ ing her strength. pened to the family of H. Habestreit, Fred Smith, plasterer and cement proprietor of the H. and H. garage, worker and chimney builder, of 104th 103d and Foetar Road, within the peat street and Fifty-seventh avenue, is a month. First, Erick Johnson broke his lef. He has been in St. Vincent's Washington, D. C.—Whether or not busy man these days. New radio ideas are developing hospital since the last of July. Sat­ the oath of allegiance to the invisible fast. The latest one is seeing a dog urday afternoon, August 6, Mr. and empire taken by the knights of the with a can tied to its tail go broad­ Mrs. Frnsnt Hoganson and two chil­ dren visited him at the hospital and Ku Klux Klan, is more binding than casting up the street. Mr. and Mrs Alfred Ladd have then left fur the beach. That night, the oath of allegiance to the United near Dolph, the rear wheels of the States taken by a member of armed purchased the O. R. Phillipa home at automobile in which the family of forces of the nation, appears to have '9321 Fifty-first avenue and are now four aero traveling sunk in soma soft been put up to the government for occupying the premises. J. A. Bradt is busy remodeling and earth and whirled the machine around decision by the klan's recently re­ repainting the Yeager theater. A and over. .Mrs. Hoganeon’s skull was vealed attempts at proselytising in r.ew box office to being constructed. fractured. She has been la Portland the United States army. A telephone will be installed. ftanatariuni since and is not yet out Following attorn pt» to dominate the ’ Mrs. Hany M. Bouvy, Cslla Cham­ of danger. Two weeks ago H. Habe- •treit slipped on his garage floor, civil government by placing its mem­ breau) to expected in Portland soon throwing his entire weight upon hia bers or friends in office in Texas, on her way to visit her sister, Mrs. left leg which broke under him. Mr. Oklahoma, and other southern and C. G. Dougherty, in Fresno, Cal. The funeral of Victor Nelson, of Hebestreit is on crutches and will be wealern states, and to abolish private kept from work for the next five or schools aa part of a plan to dominate Eighty-ninth street, who died Tues­ educational institutions in Oregon »nd day, was held yesterday. Interment Six weeks. elsewhere, the klan is now recruiting was in Mount Scott park cemetery. members in the United States army. Edgar Zehrung, 7105 Forty-eighth BOHEMIAN CLUB TO OPEN At a spectacular Initiation ceremony avenue, is busy making landscape im­ C. N. Garing has obtained a lease held at Odenton, Md., on the night of provements in the form of planting .an the building formerly occupied by August 15, several members of the flowers and sowing new grass seed. Mrs. G. R. Reed’s daughter, lira. the Grover Sanatorium at Footer ami tank corps stationed at Gamp Meade Spring roads and will open the place' were taken into the klan, according Dan Rust of Claskanine. returned to members and fripnds of the Bohe­ to reports from that place. This was home today after a week's visit. Jo­ mian club next week. There are four followed the next day by the declara­ sephine and Martin Rust also visited. Mrs. C. H. Chambreau will enter­ private (lining rooms, two on the first tion of the leader in the initiation .fluor aud two on the upper floor. ceremonies that efforts are being tain the Sisterhood of First Christian There is a dancing hall. Mr. Garing made to spread the klan influence church, Portland, ait her home on its busy remodeling and repainting ths broadcast throughout the American Buckley avenue, near Gilbert Road, September 7. building. A. E. Kern is the owner army. R. A. Robson reports a flourishing At the war department, when the .ofrthe place and has given a lease to attention of Secretary Weeks had been business in his two store« on Ninety- .run through 1926. called to reports of the affair at second street and Forty-eighth ave­ BRIDGE PLANS MATURING Odenton, it was said that no report nue, and on Forty-f fth avenue and Al a meeting of Portlanders in- had yet been received from the com­ 100th street. Dr. L. R. Pugh, Leach building, itereatod in the location of the pro­ manding officer at Camp Meade and posed southeastern bridge over the that pending receipt of official infor­ hardly can resist the temptation to go Willamette river in the city hall Tuea- mation no comment could be made. deer hunting. Hto friends would not .day night the lente delegates, Messrs. The attitude of the war department, be surprised if they discovered his -TUssey, Kildahl, Ogsbury, Lundberg aa authoritatively stated, however, is office locked. .Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Cole and chil­ and Knight agreed to the proposed that of unalterable opposition to the affiliation of members of the army dren of Port Angeles, Wash., were in Jocation, at Beacon street. A bridge coating 91,900,000 is with any organisation claiming an the Mount Scott district this week planned. The approaches will coat allegiance superior to that which is looking at available sites for a chick­ en and rabbit ranch. 4275,000, to be amessed on adjacent given to the military service. B. C. Heath's residence, which districts. The plans call for a clear­ No Divided Allegiance recently was moved off the newly, ance from water level of 198 feet, aa Senator James W. Wadsworth of high aa the present top of the Haw­ New York, chairman of the senate purchased sight for a park at Laurel- weod on Foster Road, was moved to thorne bridge is from the river. committee on military affairs, said 4110 Sixty-fifth street. regarding reports of klan activities SOLDIERS' PLOT ATTRACTIVE Mr. and Mrs. Will Knight returned in the army: “As a general proposk In an Earl, piloted by Mr. Fita- tion, I believe that the army authori­ Sunday from a vacation trip in the gersld of the force of A. C. Stevens, ties should investigate very carefully Cascades. They enjoyed visits at Me- distributor of the Winton, Haynes and the efforts of the Ku Klux Klan or Credie's Springs, Kiston Springs, Oak Earl, The Herald editor and Alex any other similar organization at­ Ridge and other places. Martin, secretary-treasurer of the tempting to proselyte among our sol­ J. C. Larkins and children, Agnes Mount Scott park cemetery and cre­ diers. I have every confidence that and Eddie, enjoyed the comedy at the matorium, on Wednesday drove to the the secretary of war will see to it Yeager theater Thursday evening. top of the cemetery grounds, to the that discipline will be preserved and The picture was “shot” in front of five-acre plot dedicated forever to the that no divided allegiance will be per­ their Ixx Angeles home. soldiers sad sailors of the late world mitted In the army.** Will Knight of the Multnomah State war. bank felt rather blue Wednesday, the Prohibited, Says General Martin Seventy-nine American warrior lads After the initiation was concluded first day after his return from vaca­ •nd one Canadian now sleep here. the soldiers and others in the au feet two inches in length was two daughters. The children received many pretty presents. The cake had ktUed near Vff8 depot at Heppner. This 1s the first specimen of blacksnake ten candles, five for each girl. ever found in this part of Oregon and speculation is rife as to how and when Mr. Arnest to Be Married H. P. Arnest, Lento’ attorney, is in his snakeship arrived. Unless loganberry growers of the Virginia. He went alone, but un­ doubtedly will come back with a bride Wlltomette valley are assured of not lees than six cents a pound for ftelr to occupy the $10.500 Laurelhurst product next season, many of them home he purchased recently. will dig up their vines and engage la BIRTHS other business This was the an- nouacement made st a meeting of a large number of growers held at Lib- srty Last year loganberries sold aa low as »H cents a pound, while this season most at the barrtoa were mar­ keted st four cents. According to a report from Deputy dame Warden Shoemaker of Newport the state gams department will soon plant the Yaqufna bay with a goodly supply of silver-side salmon and trout. Ths report stated that 300.000 isimoU would be planted and 175,000 trout. Admiral Gregory. chief of the bu­ reau of yards and docks of ths navy department, spent a couple of days at Astoria inspecting the Tongue Point naval base property and conferring with Lieutenant-Commantter Church relative to development of the station. Oregon to to receive from ths fed­ eral government an allotment of 46 Liberty motor trucks, according to Herbert Nunn, state highway engi­ neer. on return from American inks, Washington, where he completed ar­ rangements tor shipping the carriers Into this state. Buck herds, when throe or more of them are running together la Crook, Deschutes. Klamath. Lake and Jack- son counties, must be dipped twice between August 16 and November 15, according to announcement mads by Dr. W. H. Lytle, secretary of the state sanitary livestock board.* Another of Salem’s oldest landmarks has given way in the march of prog­ ress A crew of men have torn down a dwelling erected by George Neal In the year 1850. The house was plas­ tered and lathed and in Its day was one of the moot pretentious structures in Oregon. It was located in North 8alem. Appointment of Captain C. D. Rauch of Portland as referee to take testi­ mony in the injunction proceedings Instituted against appearance of the so-called Green fish bill, an Initiative measure designed to close the Colum­ bia river to all except gill net fisher­ men. was announced by Judge G. G. Bingham at Salem. Work on the third unit of the Ore­ gon Pulp and Paper company's plant at Salem has been started. This unit will provide facilities for ths manufac­ ture of bond papers and will give em­ ployment to «proximately 76 men. Thu new unit will cost »300.000 and will increase the total cost of the plant to ■ore than »1.000,000. Picking fuggle bops started In Marion county Monday, and the pick­ ing of clusters should start within the next two weeks Ths recent rains proved beneficial to the hope, and estimates have placed ths yield at 65.000 bales. Earlier In the season it was predicted that the entire crop would not exceed 40.000 bales Ground at Twelfth avenue East and Hllyard street in Eugene has been selected for the site of the new $100,- 000 hospital to be erected by the Eu­ gene Bible university, according to announcement In addition to the city building a 32-acre tract south of Eu­ gene has been selected for a sanitar­ ium and convalescent building. The 8bea hill section of the Fos­ ter-Cascadia road now has the official approval of the federal government. Copy of the agreement signed by Sec­ rotary of Agriculture Pall has been received by the Linn county court, whereby the government gives »38.000 to aid in the improvement of the road­ way. Linn county will match thia sum. A new attendance record for nation­ al guard drill in a harvest and vaca­ tion month waa set tor July. 1922, by the Oregon national guard, according to the monthly report of drill attend­ ance issued by George A. White, adju­ tant-general. A total of 1763 citizen soldiers attended each one of the four drills held tn armories during ths month. Potato dis esses are lees prevalent la Deschutes county this season than last, according to Professor Hyslop, of the Oregon Agricultural college, who has completed his field inspec­ tion for seed certification. As a re­ sult 30 per cent of the registered fields passed inspection, which to a high percetflage considering the high standard required. Solution of the acute problem fac­ ing the pear growers of the Rogue River valley was reached when the Umpqua Valley Canning company leased the cold storage plant of the Roseburg Ice company. On account of the railread situation the grow­ ers found themselves unable to ship any excel* their vary best fro IL and It appeared that heavy loseee would occur. The cannery has not sufficient capacity to take care of the surplus aa It ripens, but by obtaining the cold storage plant can continue the sea­ son, until the latter part of October, and will, in this manner, take care of all fruit which cannot be shipped tn a fresh condition. The cannery expects to put up about 490 tons at peers this year.