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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1913)
THE MORNrNC OREGONIAN. 3IOXI-A.ir, JTHuY 81," 1913. WEATHERMAN SAYS WORST - NOW OVER OREGONIAN PHOTOGRAPHER SECURES SNAPSHOTS OF PORTLAND PEOPLE TRYING TO KEEP COOL ON A HOT SUNDAY Our IWammoth Clearance Sale Continues Its Extraordinary Value-Giving As Mercury Ascends Crowds Seek Relief in Public Parks and on Rivers. very Article Reduced! MAXIMUM IS 93 DEGREES 12 Increased Humidity Causes Discom fort, tut aa Day Wanes Cool Breezes Are Wafted From Water Bringing Belief. "Hottest day of the Summer," said General Public yesterday while it Bhed its coat and reached for a palm-leaf fan. "Best ice cream day this year,'! glee fully reported the proprietors of the cafes and ice cream parlors all over the city. "Biggest day yet," reported the play ground and park directors, estimating' the crowds of visitors. "Cooler than it was Saturday," was the verdict of the office of the Weather Man. The weather man, however, would have had a hard time convincing the populace of Portland at any time yes terttey ' after 12 o'clock that he was right. As a matter of fact, his statement was correct, but the high mark on the thermometer yesterday was only one degree below the 94 registered on the preceding day. What made the heat more notice able than on Saturday was the humid ity. River Craft Crowded. Sailboats, launches, skiffs and canoes carried hundreds away from the heat and out on the river and to its cool islands early in the day, while, besides the many private river parties, the regular excursion boats ran crowded to capacity. Bathers were out all day at the natatoriums along the river. Those for whom no river excursion ran and no boat was available sought relief in the parks as the mercury be gan to climb. Like the survivors of a stricken field, men lay in thousands upon the grass In the plaza blocks, bareheaded and coatless, and dozed the hours away or conversed' languidly. The oppressive heat was too much for the most zealous Socialist spellbinder, and there was an almost complete absence of the usual group of men debating endlessly about "economic conditions." The City Park offered the shade of Its trees and the cooling sweep of the breeze from down the river, to num berless family parties, and all through the day special , cars on this run punched transfers and ran full of pil grims traveling to this oasis. Children Lex Rampant. Playgrounds were filled with chil dren, but for the most part they left the apparatus alone. North Park playground, opposite the Customs House, and the park blocks adjacent were filled all day with cos mopolitan crowds. Seven nations in swaddling clothes rolled together in the sand pits and gleefully shoveled sand over one another. Mount Tabor Park, where McElroy's Band gave its afternoon concert in the grove, was another center of great assemblage, between 3000 and 4000 peo. pie gathering there. The place where feverish activity reigned all day long was in the ice cream parlors and at the soda foun tains, where the public clamored in cessantly for something- cooling. The biggest Jump in the temperature was between 1 and 2 o'clock, when the thermometer shot up from 85 to 91. At 4 o'clock it climbed to 93 and then fell off slowly until 6 o'clock. With sundown a. cool breeze came from the river that brought quick re lief. Although the weather office predicts continued fair and warm weather for today, it is not expected that the tem perature will reach anything like the point it registered during the past three days. LEGLESS NEWSY TAKES DIP Joe Hardy Shows Feet Not Necessary to Swimmer. For the first time in four years Joe Hardy, the legless newsboy who ca vorts up and down Washington street selling papers, was allowed to demon strate yesterday that legs are not an essential when it comes to swimming- if you know how. Joe dodged the au thorities yesterday and slipped out to the Oaks, where he was allowed to - enter the swimmln' hole and demon strate his prowess, which he did to the satisfaction of many onlookers and the complete amazement of the iite guards. . "You see the authortles in all the cities along the Coast have refused to let me go into the water, thinking I would drown and they would be blamed," said Hardy after his dip yes terday. Hardy lost his legs Just below the hips while he was in Chicago several years ago. Previous to that time he was a sensational "kid" diver around Chicago and thrilled many Sunday crowds with his stunts, but not more so than he did yesterday when he put to shame some of the experts at the Oaks. HENRY MERZ DROPS DEAD Restaurant Chef Stricken While Dc ' veloping Negatives. While developing negatives in a dark room in the basement of his home, Henry Men, chef at the Hof Brau res taurant, was fatally stricken yesterday by some malady, the nature of which has not been determined. Dr. Betkin, who attended, says that it will require an autopsy to disclose the cause of death, with the probability on the side of heart disease. Mr. Men was alone at the time of the seizure, and when he was found it was thought that he had been electrocuted, but medical examination failed to show any of the traces of such an accident. Mr. Merz was of French parentage, lived at 1685 East Morrison street. He Is survived by a wife and infant child. SUMPTER HOST TO BAKER Three Hundred on Moonlight Ride Visit Dredge. SUMPTER. Or., July 20. (Special.) About 300 citizens of Baker took a moonlight -ride to this city Wednesday night and after visiting the dredge, which is engaged in mining near here. i . . i jsr .Sp - -:?r rvv; A f i V i.1s - , r I IV t'l- .uriiiii iii-iiiiii'T'" """" , W " " l yj tl ii?r . ; ' v-1 " - . ? X-A If, r!', I s fvvl f r 1. ICK CIIEAM CONKS REIGNED 1ST. THE PLAYGHOUNDS. 2. "SOME HOT BELIEVE ME!" 3. BILL RUN WATER WAS PUT WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL. 4. LAWNS . IN THE PARK WERE COMFORTABLE PLACES TO REST. 5. HUNDREDS FOUND RELIEF FROM THE HEAT IN TILE WATERS OF THE WILLAM ETTE RIVEK. , a dinner and dance were given In their honor by citizens of Sumpter. The dredge is working in the river bottom land at the edge of this place and its weekly deposits average about J10.000. . "Pay grit" is found at a depth of 10 feet and from there to rock bot tom. It is understood that the owners are contemplating securing - several other dredges to be operated In this dis trict. It is reported that Portland capital ists are negotiating with owners of promising paying bench .land In this vicinity. RAY DIAMOND REPENTANT Bank. Robber Promises to Study In Prison and I.lvo Honestly. SALEM. Or.. July . 20. (Special.) "I Intend to perfect myself in painting and drawing," declared Ray Diamond, youthful bank robber, who held up the cashier of the Glendale State Bank and stole $2800. when he was brought to the state penitentiary tonight to begin serving a term of 10 years. ' Diamond repeated that too much drinking and the excessive use of to bacco had disarranged his mind, . and emboldened him to do things he other wise never would have .dreamed of do ing! - "I am through with it all," said Dia mond. "I intend to improve my mind and opportunities while I am in here, and when I get out I shall earn an hon est living. It is a good lesson for me." Bridge Money, Ine Today. OLiYMFIA, Wash., July 20. (Special.) Lewis County officials have notified State Treasurer Edward Meath that they have accepted the terms imposed by the last Legislature, which provided for the construction of a $25,960 bridge across the Cowlitz River at Neslka, half the cost to be paid by the county and half by the state. The Lewis County contribution of $12,980 will be paid the state Monday, so that preliml nary work can be commenced at once. llt, if?. LINE TO BE O.-W. R. & N. Officials and Capitalists Go to Vale. . AUTO TRIP ALSO ARRANGED Party Headed by President Farrell, of Railroad Company, Will Pass Week Inspecting . Property and Farming Districts. To inspect the new railroad line from Vale, Or., to Day Mountain, and to look over the agricultural activities in a number of ports of Eastern Oregon, a party of railroad men and capitalists headed by President . Farrell, -of the O.-W. R. & N. Company, left last night in a private car attached to regular eastbound train No. 6 for. a week's trip by railroad and automobiles. The party will return to Portland next Saturday. From, Portland the party went to The Dalles, where the car was switched to the North Bank line. . They will arrive at Metolius at 6 - o'clock this morning, and will pass the day in and around Prlnevllle. Tonight they will stay at Bend. Tomorrow-; morning they will leave for Burns. Two or three days will be devoted to trips over the new railroad line from Vale to Day Moun tain and in agricultural districts in that vicinity. The private car will be sent on to Prairie City, where the party will end the automobile trip of about 200 miles viewed Friday. In . the party are President Farrell, Colonel Y-oung of Vancouver Barracks, - 'Drake C. O'Reilly, W. H. Hurlburt R. B. Miller, general traffic manager of the O.-W. R. & N. Company. Vice-President O'Brien. P. A. O'Farrell, a newspaper writer of New York, and Addison Bennett, of The Oregonian. KLAMATH SESSIONS END Christian Endeavor County Associa tion Well Attended. KLAMATH FALLS, Or July 20. (Special.) The Christian Endeavor County Association today concluded its session at the Methodist Episcopal Church in this city. Rev. H. H. Rott man. field" secretary for California, Oregon and Washington, was one of the speakers. He has been attending the convention in Los -ngeles and the county meeting was arranged so that he could be here on his return trip. Delegates were in attendance from societies in various parts of the county. There was a general rally today at 3 o'clock. At 7 P.M. a union meeting. of all the societies of the city was held and this closed the convention. BOY, 8, HURT BY DYNAMITE Klamath Falls Lad May Lose Arm and Also Eye. ' KLAMATH FALLS, Or July 20. (Special.) With his left hand nearly blown off and his left eye seriously injured, Huntz TJhrmann, an 8-year-old boy, is in the hospital here. He found a stick of dynamite which his father had placed under the granary . and it exploded while the , lad was playing with it. William Uhrmann, the father, is road supervisor in Yonna Valley and used the explosive in his work, and thought he had hidden it safely. Physicians think it will be necessary to amputate the hand and that , the sight of the eye may bo destroyed. Contract Goods, Groceries and Women's Fall Apparel Only Excepted The Greatest Stock-Reducing Event in All Portland! For the Vacation Outing or Summer Travel This Store Offers the Most Complete Equipment A Delightful Luncheon in Our Cool, Bright Seventh-Floor Restaurant Special 50c ! Store Opens Today at 8:30 Closes, 5:30 Our Great Vacation Contest Does Not Close Until July 26th at 9 P. M. The- Marshall 4600 PASTOR HITS I.W.W. Handling of Disturbances Ap proved in Pulpit. CAPITAL ALSO QUESTIONED The) Rev. Delmar IT Trimble Tells I Centenary Slethodlst Congrega tlon Demonstration of An- arcby Becomes National. The new form of government in its dealing with the local disturbances of the I. W. W. was declared to be al ready proving its efficiency over the previous form of municipal govern ment, by the Rev. Delmer H. Trimble, in his sermon yesterday at the Cen tenary Methodist Cnurch. "At the present time," he said, "we are having both a National and a lo cal demonstration of anarchy. The confessions of Mulhall before the Sen ate and House committees point in no enviable way to capital. The incite ments to riot and sedition on the part of the I. W. W. professional agitators in the streets of Portland in recent days is our local sore. "Anarchy at both extremes Is doubt less the product of our system, but nevertheless woe be to the anarchists of either class from which the offense comes. This Nation is in the evolu tion of "social equity and justice, its face Is set toward that front and it will grind to powder those who con sign us to anarchy in the transition. Professional Agitators Hit. "The professional agitator is to the -cause of labor and the criminal lob byist; to capital what the blackleg and the heinous hypocrite are to the church; an Incubus that must be got ten rid of for the progress or tne cause. The Interests of capital and labor are in the last analysis Inseparably allied. The great outside public is also relat , ed and must lose or win with either or both. Strikes are to these inter ests what-wars are to nations; a mu tual loss and a barbaric procedure; hence the effort to settle differences without recourse to strikes. "Oregon's desire in this has been shown in the Public Welfare Commis sion. The Nation is moving in the same direction by the recent appoint ment of -a commission on conciliation and adjustment. It would have been gracious in the recent disturbance to have given our local commission a fair show, but this could perhaps scarcely be expected from the anarchist agita tor. No sane man, however, takes him to represent labor. ' "The evident co-operation between state, citv and county authorities in this crisis is heartening to the . citl zenshlp of the state. The public has never been interested in Jealousies be tween such authorities. They have looked for articulation and in the dim past, it may be whispered, that this has sometimes in some quarters been wanting. Oregon's best day, in this regard, has doubtless just dawned. . Municipal Court Praised. "It may not be amiss in this connec tion to indicate the good work of the Municipal Court. "Our new form of government is already bearing fruit. Our people throughout the ranks of both labor and capital are with the authorities for the enforcement of our laws, as they relate to a man or a woman getting what they earn and earning what they get. If the Oregon Packing Company or any other employers are falling in this requirement let our legal machin ery be brought into operation to bring them at once to time. This is of equal importance with the using of our police to quell lawlessness on the part of seditionlsts, and if we lack law to compel the square deal to the laborer. let us enact those laws forthwith. My sympathies are with the laborer; belong to his class." Dr. Trimble will preach on "Labor, Quality' Store- of- Portland nftry. SbcU,"MoT-T-t8orv Alder 3ta. Capital and the Church" next Sunday. . Kenllworth Presbyterian Church will hold lta annual picnic Friday at Sellwood Park. The Young People's Society of the Norwegian Lutheran Church held its annual picnic Satur day at Emerson and Thirty-seventh streets. Edgrar Wothers and wife, secretaries of the Christian Endeavor work in China, will be in Portland this week and will hold a conference with local Endeavorers at the Y. W. C. A. build ing Monday evening. The Christian Endeavor Society of First Presbyterian Church had an ex cursion down the river Friday night on the steamer lone. The oree-on Holiness Association will begin its annual campmeeting Thurs day at Tremont station, on the Mount Scott line. MEDFORD MEN HAVE FIGHT Dr. J. M. Keene, Politician, Mixes Willi Water Superintendent. MEDFORD. Or, July 20. (Special.) Dr. J. M. Keene, a well-known poli tician throughout Oregon, and George M. Trana. superintendent of the city water works, engaged in a rough and tumble fight in front of the Medford Furniture & Hardware building Satur day and both men will appear before Justice of the Peace Taylor Monday to answer a charge of disturbing the peace. The trouble started over Trana snut- ting off Dr. Keene's water supply, when the water superintendent alleges he refused to obey the sprinking laws. The doctor denied this, but paid his fine and incidentally gave expression to his opinion regarding the water su perintendent. As tne doctor come up in his motor Trana met him and. receiving no reply to his query as to whether the doctor had expressed the sentiments credited to him, started a right hook to the jaw. The doctor fell down, but. by the hair, pulled Trana after him and proceeded to get on top of him. At this point the two men were separated. SOCIAL RIVALS IN COURT Thomson Creek Case to Be Heard in Medford Today. MEDFORD, Or.. July 20. (Special.) Thompson Creek is coming to Med ford en masse Monday, when the trial of Mrs. Onie Kneutzen, charged by her social rival, Mrs. Phila Bliven,- with assault and attempt to kill, takes place, It ii alleged by Mrs. Bliven that social jealousy is the prime cause of the-vicious attack upon her last bun day, when Mrs. Kneutzen, after pass ln- the time of day, struck the com plainant on the back of the head with a fence board and then proceeded to break her right arm in two places. "Mrs. Bliven is the prettiest and the richest woman in the place," explained one of her friends today, "and when she supplanted Mrs. Kneutzen as so cial favorite the disappointed woman vilified and abused here and then ,re sorted to physical violence." Trainman Hurt at Kelso. rtivrn at ta TVnsVi 'Tulv 20 fSnp- cial.) As a result of Injuries received Friday when he Jumped from a run away logging train on the road at the Multnomah Lumber & Box Company's camp. 14 miles from Kelso, Ed Hard- IMS, fc i o ,vj v vm. w unconscious ever since. His recovery is problematical, his condition being so serious that he cannot be removed from the camp. The runaway was caused by of the crew escaped by jumping. The engine ana wucts iiia ncio uciiiuxioiicu. Poultry Farm Is Started. EUGENE, Or., July 20. (Special.) Entering the poultry Industry on large scale, M. J. Thompson and R. R. Bly are erecting pens to care for 6000 hens on a 30-acre farm near Eugene. . Mr. Thompson, who has exhibited prize winning stock at Northwest poultry shows for several years, will have the superlntendency of the farm. It is in tended to market the poultry and eggs In Eugene and Portland. 1 i A-6101 CITY TO CUT WEEDS Owners of Many Lots Fail to Comply With Notices. WORK IS TO BEGIN TODAY Cost of Clearing Growth Away Will Be Assessed Against Property. Force of Laborers Expected to Be Kept Busy Long. Laborers in the city engineering de partment will commence today the task of mowing weeds on all vacant prop erty where the grass and weeds have not been cut in. compliance with weed cutting notices posted last Monday and Tuesday under the provisions of the new city weed ordinance. Today marks the fifth day of notice for nearly 100 lots. v A supply of new scythes was put in last week by the City Engineer, and the laborers who up to this time have been engaged in road work will be given the new detail. It Is expected that from now on the city will keep a force of men busy at the work, because of the fact that the time limit on a large number of uncleaned lots prob ably will expire daily during the next two weeks. While the laborers are cutting tne weeds inspectors will be out posting new notices. The cost of the work will be assessed to the property bene fited on the lien dockets of the city. R. A. Booth Will Accept. EUGENE, Or, July 20. (Special.) R. A. Booth announced yesterday that he would accept the appointment as a member of the Panama Exposition Commission from Oregon. Mr. Booth had almost decided he could not give the time required for the position, when simultaneously he received assur ances from friends out of the state that his resignation would be regretted, and a communication from Eugene business men urging that he accept. . t X Off on Pictures During: this week we offer every framed and unframed picture in our store at one-fourtli off. DO TOUR PICTURES MEW ANYTHING TO YOUT This sale will give you the opportunity of placing in your home pictures that do signi fy something. Our prices have al ways been low, and the one-quarter off puts them below competition. Religious subjects a specialty. Catholic Book & Church Supply Co. 489-401 WaaklnKtsii Street. 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