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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1908)
1 - NO FALLING OFF ON EAST SIDE About Same Amount of Build ing Going on as for Months Past. SEWER SYSTEM STARTED In Suburban Districts Lar?e Pro portion of Residences Is Owned by Occupants, Which Also Applies to Houses Building. jales and building- permits on the East Bide show a slight tailing off for the past week In consequence of the rains and possibly the approaching; Presidential elec tion So far there haa been little abate ment in the erection of dwellings, but this may be due to the fact that numbers of contracts already are let and houses start ed. New building work Is shown In the new foundations that may be seen In the different portions of this side. It Is a fact that if no more new buildings were started now for two or three months It would cut little figure In the total amount of work on account of the number of buildings started and under way. In spots, solid masses of dwellings are being erected. On Russell street, near Commercial. Alblna. eight dwellings are being put up close together that repre sent an Investment of fully JCO.000. Along Hawthorne avenue beyond iiast Twenty slrth street to Mount Tabor a large num ber of attractive homes are being erected. At the end of Hawthorne avenue the 5.000 residence of Phillip Buehner is rearing completion, while to the south on the Powell Valley Road the brick resi dence of the Jesuit priests, which la to be headquarters of that religious order In the Northwest, costing I15.0U0, is being completed. The residence of Mr. Buehner is one of the handsomest built on the East Side for several years. C. B. Moores. formerly of Salem, is completing a J16.O0O residence in Holladay Addition, which Is the most ex pensive structure of the sort erected there this vear. Woodlawn. which was held up tot years on account of unsightly Travel pits, is making good progress. The gravel pits are being filled up. , . . Important street Improvements projected are those on Union avenue between Holla day avenue and Highland; Belmont, be tween Tenth and Nineteenth streets, and on to Mount Tabor: Grand arenue, be tween Sullivan's Gulch and Holladay ave nue, all bard-surface pavement. The low est bid for Union avenue la M5S.308. Improvement In Brooklyn South. South of Division street Improvements that will cost above $2,000,000 are either un der way or are projected. The most Im portant of these improvements is the Brooklyn sewer system, which will cost the property-owners S2.000 to start with, and then more than J5CO.O00 for laterals. Practically all the other Improvements for a considerable portion of this district are . . V. MntnltlnH Of this sewer system. Desirable In every way for homes, that portion oi mo r-aoi cf Division street has been hampered and . , . i..ir Af ipspDuri and dels . anih now coming. bast Ninth street across Stephens slough Is be . . ,i , . j v. i .v. .-Ill nrnvldll a TieW Outlet jng mica, wuilii ..... Clinton street is being Improved between East Twelfth and Forty-first, one of the longest streets in that portion of the city. Ellsworth street is being Improved between East Twenty-sixth and Forty first. Several of the cross streets are be ing Improved. .Through Initiative of the IWaverly-RlchmoTHl Improvement Associa tion more than $100,000 in street and other Improvements have oeen sianru. lng a fine schoolhouse recently completed and occupied. . . In the Waverley tract $100,000 is being i a in ..r.af finnrovements. and as rxpwiuru n ......-- ..... - much more has been spent in attractive hfmes. In Kenllwortn it i estimates - $150 WO has been spent in improving streets and building homes. Gladstone avenue, a wide street, has been Improved a distance or over a mile. The Kenllwortn flub Is pushing improvements. In the Brooklyn district, where the main por tion of the Brooklyn sewer is being con structed, marked progress haa been made. A number of Important streets have been improved between Milwaukie and East Twenty-first north and south and east m . t.i. rr,af section is being changed into an attractive home-building district. . The big sewer, which will probably be completed by the first of the year, will drain this section, and add 60 per cent and more to the value of all the property. Construction of laterals will be started on all the main streets as soon as connec tions can be. made to the conduits. The Urooklyn Improvement Club has Initiated most of the Important Improvements In this district. Home-Otmers In Majority. The proportion of home-owners on the East Side compared with renters Is largely In favor of the home-owners. Of course this applies to suburbs more directly than closer'in. but In the latter the home-owners are the more numerous. There are entire districts In which there U hardly a renter, and In these suburbs houses for rent are scarce. Montavtlla people generally own their own homes. Thera are prob ably 4000 people In this district. In the Mount Scott district, where there are more than 15.000 people, more than 0 per cent of the people are home owners. This is a very large district, extending two miles east of Lents and south nearly to the Johnson Creek Val ley, embracing all the settlements along the Mount Scott Railway. Tre mont, Ivanhoe. and Woodstock. In City View Park. Rose City Park. Rossmere. Center Addition. Vernon. North Alblna. the same general pro portion of home-owners holds good. The growth in all the suburbs is re markable.. even to those who undertake to keep in touch wtih such affairs, and this growth Is not all In the direction of the Columbia Rrver or down the Peninsula. On the Mount Scott line the cars are nearly always overcrowded and the people are asking for more cars. At Lents the schoolhouse is packed with 500 pupils, while at Ar leta the attendance is nearly this num ber and another schoolhouse must be provided for the southeastern district before another year. At South Mount Tabor 0 handsome dwellings have been erected near the schoolhouse. Evening Star Grange, with 22i members, must enlarge its building. Mount Tabor hides the view to the eastward, but beyond Is a thriv ing suburb along the Base Line and election Lino roads. Just how many people are outside the city limits Is not yet known, but 25.000 would be about a correct estimate. These figures give some Idea of the districts that must be provided wttb both Bull Run water and fire protection in the near future. Carbarns lAorm Center. At the Golf Links, on East Thirteenth street, the Portland Railway. Light fewer Company la preparing to erect a large carbarn and quarters for the carmen. East Twelfth street naa oeen vacated by the city where It passes through the grounds of the company, which paid $1000 for the vacated street. The buildings will stand on the con nected grounds and extend over the va cated street. Erection of these build ings will mean another center, similar to the one in North Alblna, for the south side of the suburb of Sell-wood. It will be the center of a large num ber of carmen who live in tiellwood, and the carbarns will house the cars on the Sellwood and Oregon City lines. It Is announced that this new center will not detract much if anything from the repair shops at Milwaukie, which will be retained for repair purposes and will employ about the same number of men as now work there. On the whole, the suburb of Sellwood is making good progress. Next year part of the sub urb will build a sewer system, which will cost $100,000. Recent Realty Sales. Alice F. Smith bought a quarter block in block 13, John living's Addi tion, for $7500, with a modern house In Central Alblna M. M. Deal bought lot 2 In block $ for $4500. Also in River side Addition to Alblna Sarah McVey bought the north 36 feet of lots and 7 In Mock 3. for S2250. In Kenton, on the Peninsula. J. RA Taylor bought lot 1. In block 1; lots is and 17. block 4. for $4500. In Sullivan's Addition. Sandy road, F. C. S. Malpas bought half of blocks 45 and 4S for $3000. William Reldt purchased the frac tion of lot 1 and all of lot 2 In block 267. Holladay's Addition, for $5XI0. Charles Smith bought a quarter block In Piedmont from J. E. Minard for $2200. In Cloverdale Stella Hammer bought lot 7 In block 12, with house, for $1900. Ellen J. Cratty bought lot 17 In block 17. Mount Tabor Villa, for $1450. J. A. Arment bought lots 15 and 17 In block 39. Irvington Park, for $2600. Charles Ott Bold to Frances Alex ander lot 16. block 6. Railroad Addi tion, for $1800. The First Baptist Church bought of Waldo F. Steward lot 13 in block 4, St. John Park Addition, for $900. Lucre tia M. Palmer bought three lots in Gen eral Compson's Addition to St. John for $1450. In Alblna Homestead Hattie E. Bogue bought of John Ross lot 2, block 26, with house, for $6500. J. C. Alns worth bought lot 1. block 1. at High land, for $3000. Lot 16 In block 17, First Addition to Holladaya Addition, was sold to Joseph Basler. no price being announced. Rose Hamilton sold to August Grone the north 49 feet of lot 1, block 86, Stephens' Addition, for $6000. Henry Albers sold to F. E. Manchesters lot 8, block 837, Holladay Addition, with house, for $4350. In Central Alblna P. A. Duffleld bought lot 9, block ai. Central Alblna. for $3700. In Holladay Addition Mrs. M. A. Mc Green purchased lot 6. and the north half of lot 7. In block 15, with house for $6300. In the Jonesmore tract, at Montavllla, a large number of lots have been sold, and at present 11 attractive homes are under construction, averaging In cost up to $2000 each. PROGRESSION" OX EAST SIDE Multnomah. Addition and Rose City Park Feel Impetus. G. W. Priest, who erected many build ings in Multnomah Addition, will put up six $2000 residences on Clinton street, be tween East Thirty-seventh and East Thirty-eighth streets. All will be two atory and the total cost $12,000. Fred Koschmltzky will erect two 1SOO houses on Killingsworth avenue near East Eighth street. H. Mills will erect a $2500 dwell ing on Alnsworth avenue. O. Bracher has started work on a $4100 residence on East Forty-sixth street. Rose City Park. J. I. Mount has started a new house on East Sixty-second street to cost $3000. Butterworth-Stephenson Company have a long list of new dwellings under way. They have started a bungalow for Fred Marx. Rose City Park to cost $3500; a nine-room house for Mrs. J. Z. Collins, East Forty-second and Tillamook streets, to cost $4000. They are preparing plana for several houses In Vernon. Irvington and other places ranging In cost up to $2000. MINING CONGRESS CALLED Eleventh Annual Convention to Meet In Pittsburg-. DENVER. Oct. 24. The executive committee of the American Mining Con gress yesterday Issued the official call for the 11th annual convention to be held In Pittsburg. December 2. 3, 4 and 5, 1908. A special effort Is con templated looking to the final enact ment of the bill for the creation of a bureau of mines, now on the calendar of the United States Senate for third reading. Particular attention Is called to the work of Congress in making Investiga tions relating to the protection of the lives of miners; proposals for the elimi nation of fraudulent mining stock oper ations: the relations between customs smelters and the ore producer: Federal aid for mining schools and experiment stations; the exploitation of the rare mineral resources of the country; the conservation of mineral resources: the timber and water supply, and the unifi cation of tne mining laws of the sev eral states, are the particular subjects which will be under discussion. It Is announced the convention will be an open forum for the discussion of all mining subjects. The call invites the President of the United States, the Governor and heads of commercial bodies to appoint dele gates. A special feature of the body will be a coal mine gas-testing plant, now In course of construction In Pitts burg, under an appropriation made dur ing the last session of Congress, which will then be completed. DISSECTERS HAD BODY Woman Claims Cadaver From Stu dents In Chicago College. CHICAGO. Oct. 24. Considerable ex citement was caused In the medical lab oratories of the University of Chicago yesterday by the sudden discovery that one of the cadavers upon which four students had been dissecting since Oc tober 1 was claimed by a woman in Cali fornia as the body of her long-lost hus band. The woman Is said to be on her way to take possession of the corpse. Five months ago the man, who was about 50 years old, died a pauper at the County Hospital, leaving neither clew to his own identity nor to his relatives. After the body had been held for 20 days a customary time It passed Into the possession of the University of Chi cago, as do many others from the Coun ty Hospital unclaimed by kin. After keeping the body In storage $0 days, as the law requires, it was placed upon the dissecting table. "We were notified by the Demonstrat ors' Associationywhlch furnished us the specimen, that the body had been claimed by a relative." said Professor R. R. Bensley. head of the anatomical department, "so we took it out of the dissecting-room and placed it in storage to await the claimants. "I know nothing of the history of the Incident except that the woman Urea In California and that she held some In surance en the man." "What's his name, Mr. Sculptor?" 1 call him OPPORTUNITY." "But why is his face hidden?3 'Because men so seldom recognize him when he appears. "And why has he wings on his feet?1 'Because he is soon gone, and once gone cannot be overtaken. if, "i 'm ' i v, in i .- - imr in -vs. r a .i t v-v-rtviiT-iiv ic the mnsf nathetic regret of a man's life." Snr-rfiffj nnce said to tne wise men oi-viucus. a-iua. v--'Jr"'v- - - , - - .... Sddom does the knock of opportunity sound upon man's financial door. So seldom that, unrecognized, his SDeedv wings carry him on to be taken in by the man of quick and keen perception. P The figure above illustrates Swinton, the new town rite on the Peninsula adjoining Swift s town site. Opportunity is knocking at .your Jra & lira hiA. ten ner cent discount on all htoW Many puoffbuy real estate catch to make them buy now But we did as we advertised and the 56 business lots still unsold were sold since at our list price. Your Last Opportunity At 11 P. M. Wednesday, October 28, we will discontinue the ten per cent discount on our restricted residence district Don't let your teaVs of lost opportunity mingle with those of the Chicago, Omaha KQj& Joseph and Fort Worth citizens who failed to take unto themselves the prphfic partnership offered by opportunity whlS swift came toTheir home town. Not only did Swift come but also Armour, Gudahy, Nelson, Morris and others. They will all be on the Peninsula in five years. .... .. , . , u r Swinton is a certainty. Residence lots in Swinton will double and treble in value m a short time. Men have bought them who will build both residence and business houses. Only once in a man's lifetime does so great an opportunity as Swinton present itselt. Fortunes will be made, Mr. Thinking Investor. We will show you. Come to our office today and we will take you out in our automobiles. Auto leaves every half hour, bCSeo.b two miles of Swift's Packing Plant in Fort Worth jumped from $350 to $5000. This is Your Opportunity. Now Take It Terms: IP Per Cent Down. 2 Per Cent Per Month Colombia Tippst Commpamiy Phone Main 5681 Seventh Floor Couch Building, 109 Fourth Street Phone A 1916