The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, July 31, 1910, SECTION FOUR, Page 9, Image 49

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    THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JTHLT 31, 1910.'
NEW BUILDINGS 1
John W. Campbell, D. X. Thompson,
Walter Adams. H. C. Flxott, J. A- Miller,
R. D. Edwards, Peter Hume. Walter
Adams. A. C. Mowrey, W. H. Morehouse,
D. P. Price, Dr. R. S. Stearna and A. N.
Wills. It has been through the personal
efforts of these men that Sellwood has
been kept to the front and has set a pace
as a progressive suburb. Mr. Donaugh,.
Mr. Wills, Mr. Campbell and Mr. Adams
are the pioneer workers, for they were
the organizers of the original Board of
Trade. Rev. Mr. Thompson, pastor of
the Sellwood Presbyterian Church, has
been a factor in this suburb for the past
six years and through him the Sellwood
library and branch T. M. C. A. were
brought about. W. H. Morehouse Is do
ing a great deal for this suburb. Sell
wood Is tho best organized suburb of
Portland. '
"Something must be done to expedite
the opening of street," said a property
Owner on the Rant KIriA l Ta rof,rr. tv
THIS SORT OF HOME ADDS TO CITY'S ATTRACTIVENESS
L
EASTSTARKSTREET
ARE CULLED UNFIT1
Change in Business Center Is
Acomplished by Good
Structures.
Representatives From All Ad
vancement Clubs Form
Organization.
5 0
BUILDINGS
'
BRIDGE DELAYS DECRIED
Joseph Buchtel Expresses Opinion of
Dan Kellaber and OthersMadi
son Bridge Brings Rejoicing.
Annexation Talk Is Heard.
BY X.. H. WEUJ9.
Erection of a three-story fireproof
building at the northeast corner of
Grand avenue and East Stark street
by W. I Morgan w'll complete the pro
gramme mapped out for making East
Stark the main business street In Cen
tral East Portland. This new building
will cover 100x90 feet, and with the
basement rooms will contain five
stories, although the details have not
been entirely worked out.
This will complete a series of four
good buildings on the four corners of
this Intersection. The fir&t one, on the
southwest corer. was sold by W. L.
Morgan recently for tlOO.000. It cost
$45,000 to build and the ground cost
125,000, so that the profits on the prop
erty were $30,000.
The new building will cost at least
$50,000. It will have to stand in the
mud of the slough that seems to have
no bottom.
Mr. Morgan demonstrated that a fire
proof building can be "floated" in the
mud of this ravine when he built the
six-story reinforced concrete building
at the northwest corner of Grand ave
nue and East Stark street. This was In
one of the worst places in the slough.
It Is felt that Mr. Morgan has con
tributed substantially to the growth
and prosperity of Central East Port
land by his efforts to build up a new
business center on East Stark street
and Grand avenue, and he has cus--ceeded
better than was thought pos
sible. Since he began building at this inter
section, property all along Grand ave
nue, north and south of East Stark, has
Increased In value. As East Stark
street is a main thoroughfare, extend
ing 16 miles directly east of the city,
Mr. Morgan seems to have selected the
right place for his new business cen
ter. Business men on Stark say prop
erty owners on East Morrison street
will have to get busy or that street
will lose much of Its present prestige.
The "hold-up" of the Broadway
bridge through the alleged obstructive
measures of Frank Kiernai. Dan Kella
her and others is not regarded with
pleasure by restdents of the East Side.
"There ought to be some way to
make these obstructionists responsible
for the injury they are doing to the
East Side,' declared Joseph Buchtel
yesterday. "In private transactions
men are held responsible for the dam
age they do their neighbors, and I can
not see why Frank Kiernan cannot be
held legally responsible for the injury
he Is doing to a large part of Portland.
This damage cannot be measured In
dollars and cents, and it is all because
of the selfishness of one or two men,
who are using the courts' to delay the
erection of this bridge.
"The only object Dan Kellaher ever
had was to discredit the administration
of Mayor Simon, and his protestations
of friendliness to the Broadway bridge,"
continued Mr. Buchtel, "are all bosh, as
'everybody understands' who knows Mr.
Kellaher. As to the friendship of Dr.
Van Waters and W. L. Black, the other
members of the committee from the
East Side Business Men's Club, every
body knows where they stand. Dr. Van
Waters is' known to have been opposed
to the Broadway bridge months ago
and so to have expressed himself. He
said he could not see any use for this
bridge. W. L. Black, of course, is clerk
of the committee and represents the
Hawthorne estate."
As the Madison-treet bridge nears com
pletion the call for property in the South
East Side Increases. Owing to the delay
in the completion of this bridge 00.000
people in that part of Portland have suf
fered Inconvenience for months, but now
that the time for its completion ap
proaches they are willing to let the
troubles of the past be forgotten in the
prospects of the fine new highway across
the Willamette River soon to be thrown
open to the public.
Property In the South East Side is in
growing demand. One of the roost suc
cessful plats placed on the market ia
that of Saginaw Helghta, located "at
Lents, six miles from the Courthouse.
George T. Moore purchased this property
of 45 acres four months ago. when it
was covered with brush and stumps. Now
there are graded street sidewalk and
mains iaia. More man so per
cent or tne lots have been sold. This
tract is between Lents and Powell Valley
road, and In its vicinity, outside the city
limits, it la estimated that 10.000 people
have made their homes. The prioe of
iow jiere is Kill quits reasonable.
It is believed that a majority of the
people of the Lents district favor annex
ation to Portland. The eastern boundary
line has been fixed Just beyond the Junc
tion" on the Mount Scott and lOntacada.
lines. This line takes in all of the Mount
Jcott railway and will cut out the 5-cent
fare now charged between Lents station
and the Junction, for a distance of three
quarters of a mile. There ia a big set
tlement beyond this proposed boundary
line, but made up of people w ho have set
tled on five and ten-acre tracts and these
are opposed to annexation.
It is proposed also to extend the city
boundary llres southward to take in the
new district south of Woodstock to John
Creek, or Just north of the Clacka
mas County line. This is a beautiful
district, as is all the Woodstock coun
try, on elevated ground and v ithln the in
fluence of the site selected for the Reed
institute In Eastmoreland. Whether the
people of Portland are ready to take In
this big territory at present, with the In
creased responsibility of providing water
mains, street light, police protection and
other municipal advantages is an un
settled question. There are fully 15,iX
people now living just outside the rim
of the city in the South East Side district.
"God helps the man who h?lps him
self la the slogan of Sellwood. Acting
on this principle, this suburb built a
beautiful clubhouse under the manage
ment of the Sellwood Commercial Club,
at a cost of $10,000. No other suburb of
Portland has such a social and business
center. This is only a beginning. Money
has been raised and work srtarted for a
branch T. M. C. A., where religious, phy
sical culture and educational classes will
be taught. The branch has three lots
in the center of the suburb. The new
building and equipment will cost $18,000.
Some of the money comes from down
town men. but the most was subscribed
by residents. The men who have done
things for Sellwood art D. M. Conaugh,
' the efforts made toward making Sandy
Douievara su leet wide from East Twenty
eighth street to the city limits, started
many months ago through the Rose City
Park district. It was found at the last
session of tho Rose City Park Improve
ment League that while the report of
the viewers had been filed weeks ago,
nothing had been done to get action on
this report. This Is given as a single in
stance of delay In street extensions.
East Twenty-second street. In Brooklyn,
from Powell streets Bouth to the
Southern Pacific car shops, is another
Illustration. Although the east half of
this street was ordered opened months
ago, the fence still remains. Property
owners on the west side of the street had
already given 30 feet. East Twenty-" I
sixth street has been before the push
clubs to be made 60 feet wide for the past
five years, and the consummation la still '
several moons away. City Auditor Bar- j
uu a.uBoa mure man anyone me in
effective character of the proceedings to
open streets and believes that some bet
ter means should be adopted.
$5000 MADE IX SEVEN' MONTHS
Napoleon Davis Buys in December
and Sells In July at Good Advance.
M. J. Clohessy, of the firm of Clo
hessy & Smith, real estate, McKay
building, says the deal by which Na
poleon Davis sold to J. W. Morrow the
property at the corner ' of East Clay
street and Grand avenue has been In
correctly reported. The straight of the
deal, he says. Is thus:
Clohessy & Smith sold for Nanoleon
Davis lots 1 and 2 In block 62 of
Stephens' addition, at the southeast cor
ner of Grand avenue and East Clay
street, to J. W. Morrow, for $25,000.
This was on Tuesday of last week. On
December 1 last the same firm sold this
same property to Mr. Davis for $20,000,
so mat ne makes $5000 on the lot In
seven months.
There are several shacks on this
corner, the combined rentals of which
amount to $140 a month. The corner
is occupied by a saloon, owned bv the
Mount Hood Brewery, and a black
smith shop and a laundry are on either
side. Mr. Morrow has no plans for
mulated yet for the Improvement of
the property. It is said.
Fine Riding School Begun.
What is to be one of the finest riding
academies on the Pacific Coast has been
started on the northwest corner of Six
teenth and Jefferson streets. This will
bear the name "Kramer's Riding School,"
and Bennes & Hendricks are the authors.
The building itself, exclusive of what
fittings and fixtures will be put in later,
will cost about $30,000. and will have two
stories and a basement. It is to be in
red brick and will cover an Irregular
lot 83x111x101x110 feet. The general -contract
has been let to Wlneland & Hub
bard, and contracts for the heating sys
tem and fixtures will be let later. Piling
has been begun for the foundation.
Apartment Leases Enecess.
Claude D. Starr has put into opera
tion in the King's Hill apartment, at
the corner of King and Wayne streets,
a plan which has been In successful
vogue In the East and which he says
works well for him. .That is a six
months or a year lease, which he says
the tenants are glad to sign. Mr. Starr
has recently renovated this building
and has Installed an automatic electrio
elevator among the other Improve
ments, i nis nas attracted a good class
of tenants, and Mr. Starr says the plaos
Is full.
Eilers Warehouse Gets Addition.
Eilers Music PTnua ViaA h,i a
settled in its new wholesale block at
corner or llteenth and Fettygrove
streets, before more room was found
necessary. Therefore a six-story addi
tion Is under way, the cost of whloh Is
announced as between $20,000 and $25.
000. The space will be used mainly for
storage of new pianos. Eilers whole
sale house now IncluilAa a
block, and from this the company say
i umiriuuies w an oi its 40 stores on
the Pacific! Coast. It says also that
from three to nine carloads are re
ceived each day here.
Plow Company to Build.
Plans have been completed for a stx
story building for the John Deere Plow
Company, to be built on the block bound
ed by Bast Morrison. East Third. East
Second and East Alder streets. The plans
were prepared in the East by tho com
pany's architect, and the estimates for
the building were all received at the
home office. The building will be started
this FaU.
FOREST FIRES START AGAIN
Every Available Man in Trout River
Valley Called Out.
gutter, wash., July SO. Another
disastrous fire is raging at logging
camp No. 5 and on the White Salmon
River, and Homer Ross, one of the
forest rangers of this section, called
every available man in Trout Lake Val
ley to his aid to fight the flames.
When the firefighters left the loca
tion of the blaze last week they con
sidered the fire beyond all danger of
spreading, but a stiff breese set it
going again Tuesday.
Another blase that at first was con
sidered harmless Is that on Stegman
Ridge, on the southwest side of Mount
Adams.
Surreys Are Completed.
SALEM, Or.. July 30. (Special.)
Surveys have been completed by the
8tate Engineer on the Rogue River
project and the next move is to adjudi
cate the water rights. Superintendent
H. L Holgate. of Klamath Falls, has
not set a date for hearing, but It is
probable the hearing- will be held some
time during September. This is a large
project and there are fully 6000 claim
ants who are interested. The acreage
has not been totaled.
Salary Cut, Marshal Resigns.
VANCOUVER. Wash., July 80. (Spe
cial.) Because the Council of Camas cut
Marshal W. C. Warren's salary from $S0
to $25 a month, he has tendered his resig
nation, to take effect August 1 It was
accepted. Warren has been Marshal
of Camas since the city was first incor
porated. Chehalls Has 7 823 School Children.
MOXTESA.NO. Wash.. July SO (Spe
cial.) County Superintendent of
Schools McKilllp has completed the
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tlx v u :
LL In gray shingles with white
trimmings, the home of A. H.
Lea, at the -southwest corner of
East Thirteenth and Thompson streets.
in Irvlngton, is as good an example as
can be found of the class of homes that
is making Portland famous. This
house did not cost a great amount of
money, probably not more than $4500,
Dut Doth the architects. Kable & Kable.
and Mr. Lea have put much thought on
the place, and It shows.
The house stands on a lot EOxlOO feet.
school census for Chehalls County.
There are now 7823 children of school
age, of whom 4007 are males -nd 3818
females. In 1909 there were 6739, 3497
being males and 3242 females.
EX-I0WANS HAVE PICNIC
Association Grows ' and Plans Big
Reunions fop Future Tears. -
SPRINGFIELD, Or., July 30. (Spe
cial.) The second annual meeting of the
Iowa Picnic Association, comprising Lane
County and adjacent territory, was held
at Walker's grove in West Springfield
yesterday. More than 500 members were
p'resent and 100 new names were added
MT70H MONEY SPENT IN PARAPHERNALIA TO MANUFACTURE PAVEMENT.
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PLAJTT OF IHDEPEHDEXT PAVIXO COMPANY. t "
Covering the block between East Water street and the harbor line of the Willamette River, at the'foot of East Bal
'. ?b ln, J1 000 'eet. the Independent Paving Company la erecting ths most extensive paving plant, it Is
said. In the Northwest. It is estimated that, including the value of the block, ths big dock with Its bunkers and
$500000 machlnery and the '"" nd aut Tehlcles. the company will have, all told, an investment of nearly
nn Tt comPany Purchased the block of the Ladd estate for what is considered the remarkably low price of $150.
000. The property has a 200-foot frontage on East Water street, on which is the O. W. P. track, and extends into the
Willamette River fully 600 feet, thus providing both water and rail facilities t or transportation.
A present a dock extending out to the harbor line is being built. On this will be erected bunkers for storing
paving material. The piledrlvers are now. completing the foundation for this big dock. The power slant for manu
facturing the paving material stands at East Water and East Salmon streets. The company will have several auto
wagons, besides its mules, for naudlin g .the finished product of the plant-
WIlMHlllWHI'l'" '"" 1 111 ' . . v
far enough back to give a glimpse of
lawn and flower beds. Roses and vines
have been trained over the house and
over the pergola at one side. There Is
an air of comfort and homeliness about
the place that makes It attractive.
Inside the same idea of comfort pre
vails. One enters an entrance hall,
where a vista of the living room is
seen through beams that form arches.
The living-room Is 14x27 feet and has
a beamed celling. A fireplace Is in a
recess where a seat has been built In.
Through French doors .one passes to
to the roll, making a total membership of
900.
The afternoon was enlivened by speech
making, singing, recitations and music
by the high school orchestra of Eugene.
Plans for bigger reunions than ever in
future years were made.
Three Urged for Postmasters.
SALEM. Or., July 30. (Special.)
Representative Hawley has made the
following recommendations for post
masters In the First District: B. E.
Wolford. Talnax; W. W. & Adams,
Malln, and E. C. Way, Pokegama. All
of these postof flees are located 'in
Klamath County.
Steep Road to Be Improved.
ENTERPRISE. Or.. July 30. (Spe
t te;
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I IA . VCT r-J
the pergola . at the side of the house.
The dining-room Is of good size, 14x13 Vi
feet, and has a plate rail with. plaster
panels beneath. A sideboard has been
built in.
Fir is the wood used for finishing,
stained a warm, pleasant brown In the
hall, living-room and dining-room, and
harmonizing perfectly with the wall
tints. In the bedrooms, bathroom and
kitchen a white enamel finish has been
given the wood. The floors in the
front rooms are of quarter-sawed oak
with a good polish. All the fixtures
cial.) Troy Hill, rising from the can
yon in which the town of Troy is- situ
ated, is being blasted to facilitate
travel. The wagon road Tlg'nally was
one of the most difficult and dangerous
in the county. The road will ba
widened, the grade reduced, and many
curves lengthened.
The Dalles Ships Fruit.
THE DALLES. Or., July 30. (Spe
cial.) Fifteen hundred boxes of fruit,
apricots, peaches and plums, was the
shipment from' local growers which tho
steamer Teal carried to Portland yes
terday. The first ripe watermelons of
the season in this section were reported
Monday from Dry Hollow, south of
town.
,4 ,f
5.
bi i-i
mi
are of a special artistic design.
In finishing the upstairs Mr. Lea told
his architects he wanted something dif
ferent, so they evolved a scheme to
make the main room, through the mid
dle of the house, look like a ship's
cabin. It lends Itself to this treatment
readily, owing to Its form. Everything
will be in keeping with this Idea and
the windows will be In the shape of
port holes. On a door at one end of
the room will be arranged a pilot
wheel. The woodwork here will be
painted white. 1
BURNED AREA BUSY
New Buildings to Rise Soon on
Upper Washington.
5-STORY HOTEL PLANNED
Good Structure Will Replace How
land and ln Same Block Another
6 -Story Brick Will Go Up An
gela Hotel to Be Rebuilt.
That activity prophesied In these
columns before the flames were
quenched for the district visited by
the recent fire on upper Washington
street is in full blast.
Before the ruins had stopped smok
ing, T. L. Garland, who owns the 20x100
feet at the northwest corner of Trinity
Place and Washington street, had stuck
up a sign announcing that he would
build a four-story apartment house
there. Mr. Garland Is getting ready to
build, but Instead of four stories he
will make his bnllding five floors. A
handsome brick block is promised at
that corner. A tenant has already been
secured for the ground floor at a good
rental.
Many expressions of regret were
heard at the time of the fire because
the Angela Hotel, the handsome' four
story brick, which stood next the nar
row building at the corner of Trinity
Place, where Mr. Garland will rebuild,
had to go. Morgan, Fliedner & Boyce,
who put up the Angela for Timothy
Kinney, will duplicate the plans in an
other Angela. Work, it is understood,
will begin soon on this.
When Hugh McGuire and T. N. Stop
penbach and Mrs. Dekum paid $100,000
cash for the corner at Nineteenth and
Washington, they set a pace for values
ln that vicinity which has had a ten
dency to cause owners to hold on to
their property, expecting, naturally and
reasonably, a still greater Increase.
That block between Nineteenth and
Trinity Place will remain as it is in
definitely. The lot next the corner Is
owned by George Otten, who has made
no plans for replacing the structures
that stood there. Next to that, on the
northeast corner of Trinity Place. Rus
sell & Blyth have not yet decided what
they will do. The purchasers of the
corner at Nineteenth are also waiting.
On the corner of Washington and
Twentieth streets Keasey. Humason &
Jeffery will build a fine five-story
brick hotel building. This Is the loca
tion where the Howland, a four-story
frame apartment-house, stood. The new
hotel will be leased locally, but defi
nite plans have not been made as to
the details of the lease or the construc
tion of the building. Bennes & Hen
drlcks. architects, are blocking- out pre
liminary sketches.
Across the street, where the old Ex
position building stood, nothing will
be done until after Morrison street is
cut through. Mr. Blyth, of Russell &
Blyth, who own the property. Is ln
Europe, and Mr. Russell has made no
plans whatever.
Plans for the new Multnomah Club
are under discussion. Several schemes
have been outlined for this property.
and the one that seems to be receiving
the most attention ln a discursive way
Is that of a roofed-over stadium. The
fact that this Is an excellent location
for the big auditorium Portland is ko
lng to have gives chance for many
plans ana much talk.
' 625 Men at Work on Streets.
Not less than 500 men have been em
ployed dally by the Portland Railway,
Light & Power Company, since Janu
ary 1, on street Improvement work ln
Portland. The work is of a permanent
character on streets on which the lines
of the road are laid and which have
been ordered improved by the city. The
greatest number of men employed by
tne company at any one time ln this
work was (71 and the number is now
Zs.
CITY'S GOOD THEIR OBJECT
Fireproof Structures to Be Worked
For Along With Broadway Bridge.
Payment for Water Mains and
Parks Are to Be Taken Up,
Sort of a clearing house of the push
clubs and Improvement associations of
Portland was formed last week. Th
president or some representative mem
ber from 10 of these organizations met
at the Commercial Club Thursday night
and took steps to form a permanent
organisation which is to contain three
men from each improvement club in
the city. The second meeting will be
held Thursday night. August 11. at the
Commercial Club.
Although certain well-defined meas
ures to be taken up were mentioned t
the first meeting of this org-anlzation.
anything that Portland needs or any
thing that will make for the good of
tne city is to be the scope of tho work
done. Enthusiasm and a marked in
terest in the city's good marked the
initial meeting, together with an ear-
nestness and a faith in Portland's lu- :
ture greatness that bid fair to en-1
dure.
The meeting waa called by John H.
Haak, president of the Mount Tabor
Improvement Association. Invitations
were sent out to 19 or 14 presidents of
Portland's advancement organizations
and 10 men responded. These were
M. J. Morse, from the Waverly-Rich-mond
Club; T. T. Geer. from the Rosa
City Park Club; J. A. Currey. from the,
Portland Heights Club; Frank J. Per
kins, from the Mount Tabor Club; S. W.-
Wallcer, secretary of the Sunnyslde
Club; C. A. Bow. from the Mount Tabor
Club; Dr. A. C. Smith, from the Seventh
Street Improvement Association; B. B.
Luten, from the Mount Tabor Club, and
R. D. Merchant, from tne Kenllworth
Club. Mr. Geer presided.
Three things in particular were taken
up in the discussion, which was frank
and open, and marked by vigorous
criticism of the agencies held respon-.
sible for what the men present consid
ered wrong conditions here. These
three things are to be considered at
the larger meeting two weeks hence
and will be the first objects the or
ganization will work for.
These objects are the substitution of
fireproof school buildings for the frame
affairs now put up by the Board of
Education, popular subscriptions for
Broadway bridge bonds In small blocks
and payment for water mains out of
the general fund instead of by owners
of property abutting, as Is the system
followed now. Parks will also be
worked for.
The condition of the city schools
came ln for the greatest amount of
discussion. Numerous examples of un
sanitary surroundings were cited, not
ably in the Rose City Park school, the
Mount Tabor school and the Portland
Heights school, and criticism of ths
proposed new Lincoln High school was
indulged in. Mr. Currey showed irom
figures he had been to the trouble of
getting together how other cities are
putting up fireproof school buildings
for less money than Portland Is paying
for wooden buildings. Municipalities
that have built school buildings re
cently were mentioned, together with
the cost of these buildings, and this
table was compared with one showing
the cost of Portland schools, much to
the detriment of the latter.
In particular the new Lincoln High
school was talked over, and the fact
that it is proposed to use mill con
struction at a cost of about $350,000
came ln for much censure. The cost
of a Philadelphia High school at $150.
000 was compared, as was the $100,000.
spent for one ln St. Louis;
One of the purposes of the new or
ganization will be to Incite an Inter
est ln the taxpayers' meeting next De-.'
cember, when an opportunity will bo
given to take issue with the Sohool
Board on some of Its rulings. .
When the Broadway bridge waa
mentioned there was an immediate ex
pression of opinion to the effect that
the necessary bo ds could easily - be
sold through systematic system. The
push clubs of the city will be the
means by which this sale is to ba ac-
compllshed. j
Mr. Haak has promised the aid of
his automobile in enabling the commit
tee to call upon the presidents of all
the Improvement associations ln the
city to urge upon them the advisability
of attending the next meeting of the
"clearing house," two weeks hence. He,
with Mr. Walker and Mr. Currey, will
go at this task this week.
DELAY BACKHAUL DECISION
Commission Will Send 50 Men to
Check on Railroads.
OREGOXIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash- !
inpton. July 30. Tho interstate Com
merce Commission may be unable to ;
make a final decision in the Spokane and
Pacific Coast back-haul case until Jan
uary or February, though it originally
planned to make definite reductions by ;
October 1.
Rate Expert C. A. Lutz, of the Com- '
mission, who will supervise the check- 1
lng up of railroads as ordered by the
"Commission, will confer with representa
tives of the Great Northern and the
Northern Pacific tomorrow, and, about
August 1, will tart West with 50 assist
ants to begin active work. A record will
be made up for four months about De
cember 1 and this will postpone any re
ductions until next year.
Bible Tauglit In New Ilght. 1
Rev. w. W. McArthur, representing
the Denver Bible School, has arrived in
Portland for the purpose of conducting:
extension work. The object of the
school is the teaching- of the Scriptures
from a standpoint of healing. Among1
the subjects included in the school's
course are:
Gospel versus metaphysical healing
The Scriptures the source of Gospel beal
ing. The redemption of the body In eluded In,
the finished work of Jesus Christ.
Man's true relation to Cod throush the
risen Christ.
Man's true life through the holy spirit
the ultimate of God'a providence.
How God works and man's part.
The day of Christ what and when ia ItT
Jesus, the Christ, coming: in the clouds
what is it?
Uw versus Gospel. -
Man the incarnation of the message of
the resurrection.
A public meeting- will be held at 8
o'clock this afternoon at the Hassalo
Congregational Church, corner Of Kas
alo and Twenty-eight ": "
1
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