TIIE SUNDAY OHEGOXIAN, POItTLAyP, SEPTE3IBEIS 12, 1909, 8 n I flT. TABOR TO. PAVE Progressive Suburb Plans Big Improvements. PROJECT TO COST $500,000 Extensive District Set Aside in Which All Streets Most Have Hard - Surface Improve ment by. 1910. The Mount Tabor Improvement Assocla t!on ha worked out general plana for making that aaburb one of the most at tractive In the euy. After several month of !ay the committee on street Improve ments has finally filed complete plans Mr forming a huge hard-surface paving district of the territory between est .venue. Hawthorne avenue. Base Line road and East Forty-first street. Within this district, next Fall, all unimproved streets will be paved with hard-surface material. By that time It Is hoped also to have sewer connections from the Brooklyn district. However, aa It Is pro jwwd to follow the Seattle plan and park s.l the streets, laylr water and gas mains and sewers in the park between the curb and sidewalk, there will be no delay In the Improvements. The Inten tion is to start proceeding for these Im provements so that the work may be com pleted Jn 1910. Including sewers, water and gas mains. It wlU mean a great con tract. Involving an expenditure estimated at $500,000. The improvement of Belmont street with hard-surf aca pavement to East Sixty-second street is progressing rapidly nd will be completed before the end of the year. It has been proposed that this Improvement be continued on to East Sixty-ninth street, at the end of the car line. Opposition has been encountered from some of the property-owners, but It is expected thst everything will be sat !.factorily adjust in a short time. The extension and improvement of Belmont street to the end of the carllne is con ceded to be of great Importance to the large district at Tabor Heights, as Bel mont is the main artery of that district. Tentative plans for beautifying Mount Tabor Park are being discussed by the Mount Tabor Improvement Association. A boulevard will wind around the eleva tion from the north side, according to present plans, ending at the top by way of the east and south sides. But the most pretentious plan is to have the water, flowing from the upper to the lower of the new reservoirs to be built at Mount Tabor, fall in artificial cascades. There will be a fall of 130 feet between the two new reservoirs. It is urged that it could be arranged to have the overflow con ducted from the upper to the lower reser voir over such artificial cascades at very little cost. Such an arrangement would certainly add greatly to the beauty of the park. Work la progressing on tho new $10, 000 home of Professor Gault, assistant city school superintendent, at Mount Ta bor It will be one of the most attractive residences in that suburb. Dr. W. T. WlU liamson la erecting a two-etory frame sanitarium building on the south side of Mount Tabor at a cost of about $16,000. A new home for the priest and teachers of St. Stephens Church and school is being erected on East Taylor street at a cost of $500. One of the most important street Im provements at Mount Tabor is the open ing and extension of Hawthorne avenue from Bast Fifty-fifth street, the present end of Hawthorne avenue, to' East Six tieth street. At East Sixtieth Hawthorn avenue would connect with all the county roads. This extension is in line with the plan to make Hawthorne avenue a gen eral thoroughfare by the time the Madison-street bridge Is completed and opened, next June. It Is also proposed to open Bast Seventy-first street, between Haw thorne avenue and the Base Line road, which would give another means of ac cess to the Mount Tabor Park. The old Mount Tabor Presbyterian Church, on Belmont street, has been moved to a new location to make room for the new and modern $12,000 church edifice to be erected on the old site. F. Underwood has let the contract for the erection of a residence on East Fifty-fifth street, between Belmont and East Morrison streets, to cost $4000, to P. A. Carlander. I,ocal Men Buy Idaho Ranch. One of the largest out-of-town land deals in some time was closed yester day by Murphy Caswell, when they took over the well-known Burke-Hum-phrey cattle ranch of $500 acres at American Falls. Idaho, the cattle and horses being ineluded In the sale. This j land Is practically all level, and sub i Irrigated, and several streams run ' through the place. The ranch is known as the finest In that section. The soil is exceptionally rtch and particularly adapted to cultivation of suar boets or alfalfa. Considerable of the land now in hay. The transaction was for cash, and Murphy & Caswell say It was bought as an investment, after a thorotfgh Investigation. They will eon , tlnue the business of cattle-raising, at : least for the present. Later, If condl ' tlons warrant, they may cut the land into five and ten-acre tracts. This land practically adjoins the town of ' American Falls. HEINZE INDICTMENTS GO Court Dismisses Conspiracy Charge and Most of Fraud Counts. NEW YORK, Sept. XL The indictments charging F. Augustus Heinze, the copper financier, with conspiracy to obstruct the administration of justice by concealing the books of the United Copper Company, were dismissed today by Judge Hough, of the United States Circuit Court. The books were under subpena of the Federal Court last Spring when the courts were Investigating Mr. Heinze's action as president of the Mercantile National Batik In sustaining the firm of Otto Heinz & Co., during the financial panic of 1907. The accounts which were wanted ou!d not be found by the Fed eral officers and Heinze's indictment fol lowed. Judge Hough today also dismissed la of the 16 counts in an Indictment also pending against Mr. Heinze. charging him with misapplication of the funds of-the Mercantile National Bank by certifying checks of the firm of Otto Heinze & Co. One of the Indictments alleging mis application of the funds of the bank by Mr. Heinze was approved by Judge Hough. Judge Hough, in dl.-nni.nslng the 1 counts of the Indictment charging mis application of the funds of the bank, said that these counts seemed to charge that Heinze, for the benefit of himself and others named, caused the bank to discount a single amount of commercial paper and lost the amount paid- Tne Judge satd it would be ' necessary to maintain an action for conversion of the proceeds of the note which he did not believe could be done. He therefore threw out those counts. The sixteenth count, which was re tained, charges that Heinze knew the giver of the note was ipsolvent when it was discounted. The Judge said this" would amount to conversion. v STREET SOON TO GLEAM DESIGN FOR SEVEXTH-STREET LIGHTS ADOPTED. Cluster Made by H. H. Bailey Will Be Used for Illuminating 14 Blocks of Thoroughfare. Through the plblic-spirited attitude of the Seventh Street Improvement Asso ciation, composed of property-owners SEVENTH - STREET LAMP POST. iCb t p-f- --Lt-a-fr- y .jm-lllmim --ri SS-? Type of Ornameatal Lamp Poat With Which the Seventh Street Improve ment AMelatloa Will Light Seventh Street The Poat From Base to Top la Thirteen Feet Six Inches High. along that thoroughfare, comprehensive plans have about been completed for lighting the street throughout its whole length In the downtown district and mak ing it one of the best-kept and best lighted avenues of traffic In the city. At a recent meeting of the association a design for an ornamental electric light post prepared by H. H. Bailey was selected. Arrangements have been made to set nearly 100 of these light posts at Intervals of about 60 feet along each side of Seventh street for 14 blocks, from Couch to Columbia. The project will cost nearly $10,000, but When it is completed, the street will be splendidly Illuminated. The light posts stand 13 feet 6 Inches In height from base to top. They are beautifully finished in an antique bronze color. At' the top of each post is a cluster of five electric arcs, which give a combined . light of 373 candle power. Every member of the associa tion has been working enthusiastically on the lighting project since it was first proposed. Slg Sichel. of the Exec utive Board, has given it particularly strong support. The officers of the as sociation are J. C. Beck, president; J. B. Teon, vice-president; E. T. Ames, secretary; J. C. Friendly, treasurer, and the executive board Is composed of J. C. Alnsworth, E. Henry Wemme, J. J. Jennings, H. K. Arnold and J. P. Mof fett. Some of the principal business houses and theaters are situated along Seventh street. Among the big buildings are the Beck building, the new Electric building, the T. M. C. A. building, the Public Library and the new Hellig and Lyric Theaters. The Electric building will be one of the finest Illuminated structures In the city when it Is completed. The mem bers of the association believe the light ing of the street will stimulate retail business along the thoroughfare. Ac cording to present plans, the new Broad way bridge will have Its west approach beginning on North Seventh, which will add still more to the Importance of the street. Free to Men. EAST SIDE GROWS Statistics Show Number Buildings Erected. of WEST SIDE LEFT BEHIND Dr. Taylor's $10,000 museum, now open, admission free. 234 H Morrison St., cor. 2d. Real Estate Company Gathers Fig ures Showing Remarkable Gains in Building Operations During 1D08 and Part of 1909. Much Interesting information on Port land and the building permits issued here during 1908 and the first eight months of this year is contained In a neat post card which has Just been Issued by the Oregon Real 'Estate Company. Among other features are exact statistics as to the number of new residences and busi ness housos that have actually been erected In the city, given In detail for the West Side and the Eaet Side during that time. The figures compiled by the real estate firm show to advantage the remarkable growth - which the city has enjoyed in the 20 months since January 1, 1908. During 1S0S, according to the statistics given, 3021 new residences and 211 busi ness nouses were built. Of the residences. 2747 were put up on tbe East Side and 274 on the West Sldjk One hundred and twelve new business houses were erected on the East Side during the same period and 89 on the West Side. -For the first eight months of this year, 1791 new residences have been built, 1633 of them on the East Side and 168 on the West Side, and 18S business houses, 102 of which were on the East Side and 86 on the West Side. During the corresponding eight months of 1908. there were 2154 new residences, of which 1938 were on the Eaet Side and 216 on the West Side. At the same time, 136 business houses were completed, 73 on the East Side and S3 on the West Side. Thebe figures show that building of new residences has not been quite so heavy this year as last, but that many more business houses have been built. . During August of this year, the card gives figures showing that 193 residence permits were taken out for East Side dwellings and 32 for those on the West Side, with 12 permits for business houses on the East Side and 15 on the West Side. During August of 1908 there were 210 resi dence permits for the East Side, and 30 for the ' West Side, while the business houses totaled ten and six respectively. These statistics show that 73 per cent of the homeo are on the Bast Side. The real estate firm further calls attention to the fact that Portland's population, as given in- Polk's directory, is 255,371. Portland, it shows, ranks fourth as a distributing point 'for agricultural Implements in the United States and in 1908 was the second wheat shipping point In the United States, with shipments of 13,042,000 bushels of wheat. "Lest Tou Forget" it concludes, "Remerdber that the New York of Portland will be on the East Side." ' SCHOOLS OPEN TOMORROW Three Buildings Not Ready Until Heating Apparatus Is- Installed. The public schools will open tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock for the Fall term, but the Davis, Eliot and Stephens build ings will not be used until steam heating apparatus is installed. This will not re quire very long, it is said, and will be rushed as rapidly as is possible. The delay in Installation is said to have been caused by slow shipments from the East. Aside from the lack of heating ap paratus in the three new school build ings mentioned, everything is In readi ness for the opening of the term. The members of the Board of Education en deavored this year to have the buildings completed and in proper order for the first day of school, but failed in the places stated. There are many other new houses, however, which are completed and ready for occupancy, so that the vacation work of the board is regarded as excellent. There has been a general overhauling of all the buildings, at great expense, to make them more comfort able. City Superintendent Rigler and Assist ant Superintendent Grout predict a good Increase in the number of pupils to be registered this week. There has been a shifting of the school boundaries, which required a great amount of work, owing to the addition of new buildings. TAKES BIGPRIZE MONEY Ed Schoel, of Albany, Exhibits Fine Stock at StaJo Fair. . ALBANY, Or.. Sept. 11. (Special.) Ed SchoeL.of Albany, captured 1336 In prize .money and four special gold medals with an exhibit of 25 hogs, 12 sheep and 30 specimens of poultry which he took to the California State Fair. Schoel passed through Albany yesterday en route from Sacramento to Salem to enter his exhibit at the Oregon State Fair, and reported that he took every first prize in the classes of hogs and sheep In which -he was entered, and also every first in his entries In poultry, except on buff leghorns and ducks. After the State Fair at Salem, Schoel will take his exhibit to the Pacific Na tional Livestock Show at Portland and the Alaska-Yukon-Paclfic Exposition at Seattle. Last year in a tour of four fairs in the Pacific Northwest Schoel won $774 in prizes, and bids fair to ex cel that record this year. . Eskimos Seek Education. SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 11. Ben and Mary Twitchell. aged 3 and 6 years re spectively, children of A. H. Twitchell, agent of the Kuskoquim Commercial Company at Kuskoquim, Alaska, and his Eskimo wife, arrived yesterday on the schooner Monterey to begin their education in this city. The children were entrusted to the care of the cap tain of the Monterey after arrange ments for their reception and educatkra here had been made. OI o I -h, a.J O AT NEHALEM BAY AT NEHALEM BAY Necarney City Hydrocarbon Oil Company, Operators WE DO NOT CAEE A RAP about the controversy concerning the name of the NEHALEM WAX thev may call it Beeswax, Vegetable Wax, Mineral Wax, Fossil Wax or any other old Wax, for the Wax has had little to do with the Oil subject other than to have been the means of the Oil discovery. The BITU AIINOUS SANDSTONE, of .which there are thousands of tons in sight, and other extensive, conclusive, Uii sijrns (some of them. known to us only), is what we base our conclusions upon that this is an Oil Basin, and these deductions are being strengthened, and. fully borne out, by new discoveries every day. We are backing our judgment and conclusions, in a substantial way, by buying, shipping and placing upon the, ground an expensive and thoroughly equipped Oil Drilling Machine, and by hiring a high-priced successful driller of 18 years'xperience in many of the most difficult Oil Fields of the world. Following is a letter received by the Secretary of the Necarney City Hydrocarbon Oil Go., this morning, from Mr. Durham, the driller. W S GREGORY, SECRETARY HYDROCARBON OW CO., 274 Oak Street, Portland; Or. Dear Sh n-As I have a little spare time, just now, I will give you my ideas in regard to the od prospect in Nehalem Basin for t i sure lyan oil basin! I think yon-have one of the best things in Oregon. In the course of a few weeks you will see that I am right. I am well eased with the prospect of "oil, and I am glad I have the chance of boring the first well, for I know it will be a snre thing I have spent the larger part , of . my hfX the Afferent oil fields of the U. S. A., and some in the forei fields but I never was so thoroughly convinced of oil in any field, my iixe in me TO .. I T , . (.lf Af, TT?t f-o nnnn his sunenor ludfrment m locating the first well. from tha surface indications, ix i. was in ronamu x wuuw -""6""- " -i c . : . T t m-no t m ours very truiy, J. P. DURHAM. The Necarney City Hydrocarbon Oil Company, a corporation, is capitalized but for 50,000 shares, par value one doUar per share, or $50,000. They place on sale the shares in 5000-ahare blocks ; as they do not wish to sell one single share more than is necessary to assist them in developing the first well for it the Irrst well sunk is a success it will not be necessary to sell another share of stock, for the reason of the low capital ization, this stock now selling for one dollar, will be worth anywhere from $500 to $1000 per share. Every dollar received for the sale of this stock is used' in developing the Oil Property. Not ONE dollar is paid to anv officer of the company as a salary, even Mr. Carson, the general manager and expert of the company, who is entitled to a salarv. waives all right to the same, until the success of the undertaking is assured, and to further safeguard invest nfthe stock of the NECARNEY CITY HYDROCARBON OIL CO., . the Nehalem Bay Land Company makes the following proposition. If for any reason the Oil Company is unsuccessful, they,' the Nehalem Bay Land Company will take over the stock, and allow full credit for the amount paid for the stock, upon the purchase price of a lot, to the extent of $50.00 per any one lot, in their ; Necarney City tract. In other words, if you should buy $50.00 worth of the Oil stock, and become dissatisfied with the stock at any time, the Nehalem Bay Land Company will take your stock and give you credit for the $50.00 upon any 'lot you may select at that time. The Nehalem Bay Land Company is a heavy investor in the stock of the Necarney -City Hydrocarbon Oil Company. . , , , . - All loyal citizens of Oregon, and especially Portland, should be interested m the mineral development of Oregon. Nothing could possibly happen that would so thoroughly advertise the state as the finding of a mineral found nowhere else in the United States namely, the finding of a Hydrocarbon Oil Deposit. Take up any encyclopedia and turn to Fossil Wax (ceresine), Ozocerite and Bituminous Sandstone, and youwill find the Hydrocarbon Oil Industry to be of vast proportion. We have m our office on exhibition the Wax, Bituminous Sandstone and Hydrocarbon Oil taken therefrom, and our expert tells us he has discered many byproducts, one of which will provfe of far greater value than yet discovered, in any other Oil Field m the United States. . ' . . A few dollars invested in this stock may mean thousands to you m a short time. Necarney City Hydrocarbon Gil Company 274 Oak Street, or 336 Chamber of Commerce Bldg P ortland, Oregon. CAR BARNS GO UP Street Railway Company Building at Seliwood. Is COST WILL BE $60,000 Will Completion of Big Building Result In the Erection of Many Cozy Homes in That District. Work on the big carbarns for the Port land Railway, Light & Power Company, at the south Bide of Seliwood, near the Golf Links, Is going forward rapidly. The structure is being erected of brick and the walls are already nearly com pleted. It will be about 400x150 feet in dimensions and will take care of the Bell wood, Mount Scott and Oregon City cars. The carbarns extend east and west along the Eatacada and Oregon City tracks. Con nection with these lines by tracks extend ing through the buildings will be made at tha weet end. It will be one of the most pretentious oarbams to be erected by the company In Portland. Tracks through the carbarns will all run over pits giving easy access' for workmen underneath the cars. A club room will be -provided for the carmen who operate on the division In the south East Side. The cost of thfi building and equipment will run up to about 60.000. The ' erection of this building will prob ably mean that many carmen will live In Seliwood as near the carbarns as they can. and may result in the erection of a number of homes in the Immediate neigh borhood. Plans will shortly Be drawn up for the branch T. M. C. A. to be erected on Umatilla avenue, near East Thirteenth street, this Fall. It will be a two-story structure, containing a gymnasium, read ing and reception rooms, and other smaller departments. Only In general have the plans for this structure been discussed. The lot for the site has been secured and paid for and is in a location convenient to the public. Several local pastors have the matter of erecting this building In hand. Its cost and definite details are yet to be worked out but It is thought the building and equipment .will cost about $2500. Dedication of the new clubhouse of the Seliwood Commercial Club will be held some time in November, at which time the building may be completed. This clubhouse is designed to be a common center for the business and social ln- 4 a ;a ai a B a e a a a alia a! s a a"ej a fii 3 Ei Is 3 ik r ' T' ... r i i 'r- PiFiFiFiFFi :i' If V : i ' f':';fc yyyaUy'::i- v ja Ey a a N,r i.- i' iV'Sr'-J 1X3 3 IS ' G S I'a a a a a apTa la alia alia a'ls alia a saaa aaaffiaaaa ing,lsni!ini ling linsllsnslliniJinsllgnsllsni.lanil PUSH FOR ALBF.RS BROS.' NEW CEREAL MILL, TO BE CONSTRUCTED AT FOOT OF WVEJOY STREET. te rests of this suburb. It will be owned by business men and residents of the suburb and will be conducted along con servative lines. It will be the meeting place of the Seliwood Board of Trade and other kindred organizations. Business men will make it a place for meeting as sociates. Leading citizens of this suburb are taking an Interest In the project. Seliwood Is to have a first-class laundry and a hatel. The contract for the laundry building, to be erected on East Thirteenth street" and Tacoma avenue, has been let for $S0OO and the foundation has been started. On the comer south of the laun dry a hotel Is to be erected In the near f uloire. This corner has been cleared preparatory to the erection of the hotel. No plans have yet been drawn for the building. Street and sewer work Is now In pro gress In Seliwood which will cost when coYnpleted more than, 1200,000, which Is considered a good showing for this suburb. Nearly every Important street is belg improved, and several new streets are to be opened between Midway and Seliwood. The Paciflo Contracting Com pany will complete its contract on the "Western Seliwood sewer district before November. Its cost will be SS5.000, and a secondary sewer system costing $186,000 has also been provided for. East Thir teenth street, following the electric rail way, will be extended to the Portland Crematorium, while several streets are to be opened and Improved between Thirteenth and' Milwaukle streets. East After much hammering, the water shortage In Seliwood Is to be relieved by the laying of a reinforcing water main from Division street through Kenilworth to a connection with the ten-inch main thnt now supplies Seliwood at Holgate and Milwaukle streets. This main will be of 12 or 16-lnch pipe, and it Is esti mated will carry enough water to supply Seliwood and the new Westmoreland Ad dition for several years to come. More t property Is being sold south of Holgate street than ever before. The opening of that part of the Ladd farm has stimulated movement of real estate to a remarkable extent in this hitherto neglected portion of the city. Already several new houses are under construc tion and others have been contracted for. A vast system of street Improvements Is to be undertaken. It has been popularly supposed that Portland on the East Side Is moving toward the Columbia River, but It Is also moving up. the Willamette River. If that part of the Golf Links between the electric railway and the Milwaukle road were thrown open to the home builder, as It is reported It will be, Mil waukle would soon be a Portland suburb. Rancher Identifies Thief. BTJTTE. Mont., Sept. 11. Charles Gulgnon, a Whitehall, Mont., rancher, today Identified George Gordon Fitz gerald and John Grew, held n a swindle case, as two 'men who flim flammed him out of $6200 In New York, six years ago, while Gulgnon was on his way to France on a visit. The pair are accused of robbing a local Greelc restaurateur, George Bullerr, of $3500 In a bunco game. ROSEBURG PLEDGES AID Will Kalse $6000 fop Railroad Sur Mcy to Coos Bay. ROSEBURG, Or., fiept. ll.-rAt a meet ing last night of the Roseburg Commercial Club, with representatives ofJhe Cham bers' of Commerce of MarShfteld and North Bend, it was decided to raise $6000 In this city to finance the completion of the railroad survey from Coos Bay to Roseburg. The plan Is after the survey Is completed and rights of way secured, to offer them to any capitalists wanting to build -the railroad. The Coos Bay cities have already financed the hardest part of survey, from there eastward 27 miles, getting a 1 per cent grade through the mountains. Trunks, suitcases and bags, variety at Harris Trunk Co. Largest HAVE YOU SEEN lETZGffi ACRE TRACTS? If not, you certainly missed seeing the most beautifully situated property on the market. We are opening up new streets, making some of the choic est parcels accessible, particularly those having an ever-running creek through them, and fine park-like tracts with beautiful virgin timber, suffi cient to supply fuel for years to come. It is considered the best of soil that can produce such large tr,ees. This Tract is on the OREGON ELECTRIC RAILWAY (Salem line) at METZG-ER STATION, only 30 minutes' ride from depot at Fronf and Jefferson streets. Agents always there to show you the property. Price, $250 and up per acre on such easy payments that anyone can make them, thus acquiring a valuable piece of property which is likely to be in the city limits before very long and make the owners independent. For plats and other information call at our Portland Office, 226 and 228 Front street, or at Metzger Station. HERMAN METZGER, Owner City phones, Main 474 and A 1374. . Metzger Station phone, Main 6409.