8 SUNDAY OREGOXIAN". PORTIAXD, JULT 31. 1910. BUS1NESSMENN0W OPEN SHOP ALLIES Portland's Industrial World Takes Decisive Action in Mass Meeting. LABOR CONFERENCE TODAY Following Decision of Draymen's As : sociation Against Arbitrating Teamsters Strke, General Walkout Plan I'nder Way. Two hundred business and profes sional men. gathered in meeting in the .. convention hall of the Commercial Club yesterday, declared allegiance to the open-shop principle, voted down in prac tically unanimous voice a resolution of- . ferlng mediation by the business In turests in the present teamsters' strike; and also laid on the table a resolution recommending that the Commercial Club maintain a permanent arbitration I'Ommlttee to solve labor difficulties in the city. Representatives of the Draymen's Association yesterday also declined to accept the proposition submitted by the Central Labor Council providing . for arbitration of the teamsters' strike, and the Central La"bor Council will convene again today to determine whether to call a general strike of union labor in Portland. Committee to Canvass City. Apparently a distinct impetus was Rqlven to the open-shop movement in ; Portland at the business men's meeting, . , for. in addition to the acts already enumerated, the meeting instructed the chairman. Harvey Beckwith. president of the Commercial Club and manager of Wells-Fargo & Co.. to appoint a committee of 13 to canvass tie retail, wholesale and manufacturing lnstitu- . Hons to gain recruits to the open-shop movement and to induce the proprietors thereof to display open-shop-card an nouncements in their windows. ' The declaration indorsing the open shop was in the form of a motion pre sented by L. A. Lewis, and, in addition thereto, a set resolution was adooted denouncing picketing and secondary boycotts. The motion received one dis- i Hentlng rote and tho resolution none. ; The following is the resolution: We affirm the right of men to organize for their betterment within the law. We affirm the right of men to lawfully sell their labor as they may see tit without . restraint. We denounce what la generally known aa t r picketing. . j : We denounce the secondary boycott and ; the display of banners, placards and the like liy any man or organization for the purpose ; or injuring another's bualneaa a wrong in principle and un-American. ; And we pld(re ouraelves wholly and wlth- otit reservation to the support of these prin ciples. Chairman Hud Hands Pull. The men who were present at the meeting were summoned by telephone and Charman Beckwith explains tiiat the fact that many business men did not receive invitations was not because of any oversight but through the phyxl ' cal impossibility of getting word to all in one morning. The. object of the gathering as an nounced by Mr. Beckwith, was discus ' slon of the open shop. After calling J i the meeting to order he suggested that , a chairman be elected other than him self, but on motion of K. L. Thompson. ; Mr. Beckwith was elected. The resolution heretofore given was presented and adopted without dlscus ; slon. Thereafter B. S. Josselyn. president of the Portland Railway, Llgnt & j-ower Company, brought up the matter of the teamsters" strike. Mr. Josselyn is a. member of the executive committee of the Employers' Association and he i told of discussions had with the repre ' sentatives ' of the Draymen's Associa- lion. Mr. Josselyn called attention to the statements made my union leaders that the issue in the teamsters' strike )' was not the open shop, but one wholly of wages. He then read a copy of the , demand made by the teamsters on the ' draymen, and called attention to the two last paragraphs, one of which pro . ; vides that new men shall be allowed 15 , ' days In which to Join the union, and . the other that union men shall be given the preference, when available, when the employers are hiring, men. Nothing to Arbitrate. These two paragraphs, he declared, were plainly demands for a closed snop, but said he was Inclined to show a conciliatory spirit in the controversy and would favor the appointment of a committee to meet the one named by the Central Labor Council to discuss . the trouble solely from the standpoint of wages. So far as the open shop was concerned, he declared, there could be nothing to arbitrate. I. Lang put Mr. Josselyn's suggestion into the form of a. motion, but it raised . a storm of protest.' in which the discus sion ranged from the history of the trike on the American-Hawaii steam ships to the machinists' trouble. The possibility of a serious general strike was declared by V. H. Corbett to be "poppycock." and W. C. Bristol as serted that the "number that is going to throttle you is 3300 and not 11,000. as has been stated by the union leaders, and I can select 10 men from this room who will down that 3300 if you will Just put a little Norway iron into their spines." It was suggested by President Heints. ;j of the Manufacturers' Association, that the draymen should come tack at the unions with a statement as to what ; they were willing to pay in wages, and H. J. Hanson, of the Pacific Transfer Company, arose and said that some time ago he bad told his men that he, would take them back at wages of S3 per day, but that any man who did not earn his JS per day would not be retained. Deal Only as Individuals. "I was told that if I would present f- such a proposition to the union, the men would return to work." he said, "but I told them I would deal with them only as individuals,-- that I would : not make any proposition whatever to ; the union and that from that time forth the Pacific Transfer Company would run Its own business. The men did not return to work, but I have met fully 100 strikers who are anxious to -! take their old places, but dare not do so. I am now willing to take some of mr old men back at ti per day, but not one of the hoodlums who have been stoning other teamsters." ; A. H. JDevers Insisted that the mo- tion wa not in order as the meeting waa not called to discuss the team sters' strike. He insisted that there was nothing whatever to arbitrate and related a circumstance of where one drayman had returned to his old posi tion and been stoned by strikers. "The statement that only a question of wages is at issue In the teamsters' strike Is nothing more than a lie," de clared W. H. Corbett. "The labor agi tators sent here to stir up trouble have not 'made, good' and the minute we meet them and concede anything they will herald it in their labor press as a great victory for the unions and will go ahead until they get this city down. Concessions to the unions will be the beginning of our- downfall." Many of those present, however, seemed to have the Impression that the' proposed board was intended to take up the present strike as well as future difficulties and it received opposition on that -score. W. F. Woodward said that the retail merchants had been having trouble with in their ranks and that some of the men who had agreed to stand by the open rhop movement had sidestepped. fHe want ed the people . to understand who was who in the struggle by the posting of cards in the windows. T. D. Honeyman, Applauded. The reference to sidestepping was. ap parently taken aa somewhat personal by T. D. Honeyman, who said that in x-iew of the passage, of the ordinance forbid ding the display - of boycott banners he had believed that there would be equity In the merchants not displaying the open shop cards. He said he had offered, however, to sign an agreement not to employ a union man in his store while the present difficulty was in progress and to post a check of $1000 to be for feited if he -did not keep his agreement. "I shall now put up the . open-shop card," he concluded. Mr. Honeyman's remarks - were ap plauded and the meeting then adopted the motion that the men assembled in dorse the open-shop movement and post the cards in their places of business. On motion of B. S. Josselyn the dray men were asked to present their side of the strike controversy to the press and the meeting adjourned, following the adoption of a motion instructing the chairman to appoint a committee of 12 to investigate the open-shop sentiment among the business men generally. Chairman Beckwith announced the names pf committees later in the after noon aa follows: Julius L. Meier, department store; W. F. Woodward, drugs: Edward Ehrman. wholesale grocer; W. H. Corbett, iron and steel; F. H. Ransome, lumber; George Lawrence. Jr., leather; H. CI. Wortman. department store; A. Felden heimer. Jewelry; W. A. Knight, shoes; William Gadsby. furniture: E. L. Thomp son. banker; T. D. Honeyman, hardware. Mr. Beckwith said lest night that he had selected the committee with the view to getting a representative from each general line of business. The members are asked to meet in the parlors of the Commercial Club at 10 A. M. Monday - to elect a chairman and perfect an organi zation. It is expected that at that time they- will also district the city for the purpose of canvassing it. HUSBAND REMAINS . AWAY Wife of S. A. Blanchar Reports Dis appearance to Police. , City detectives spent considerable time yesterday in an effort to deter mine the present whereabouts of S. A. Blanchar, a well-to-do resident of Kerrigan Station, near Gresham. Blanchar's wife reported to the po lice that her husband had been missing from home since Tuesday. He left at noon that day, ostensibly on a business errand. His wife, after a few days, started a quiet Inquiry among friends and neighbors. They had not seen him. The detectives are . considering the theory that Blanchar and his wife had some difference and that he is remain ing away from her from choice rather than by accident. They have learned that for some time before his disap pearance Blanchar had been making in quiries with reference to farm lands in the vicinity of Eugene. They think that he may have gone there. The authorities at Eugene will be asked to search for him. Blanchar is 62 years old. 5 feet 7 inches in height, weighs 160 pounds, is sitiooth faced, has dark hair, sprinkled with gray, and Is lame in the right leg. At the time of his disappearance he wore a dark gray suit and a stiff hat. SEASON FOR DEER OPENS Game Warden Prepares to Punish Violators of the Law. With the opening of the deer eeason August 1, State Game Warden R. O. Stevenson is preparing to make a strenu ous campaign against all violators of the game laws. Special vigilance will" be maintained by the deputy game wardens to prevent the killing of female deer, which is unlaw ful at all seasons of the year. It has been the practice of hunters in the past to mutilate the carcasses of the slain animals to hide the sex but this is also now prevented by law. Deer in the Oregon mountains are rapidly passing and It will be necessary to enforce the game law in every respect to save them from becoming extinct. The open season for buck deer oloses Novem ber 1. The penalty for the violation of the deer laws Is a fine of not less than $50 not more than 50. or imprisonment in the County Jail for not less than 60 days nor more than 90 days, or by both fine and imprisonment. f KI'XERAL OP LATE PAST GRAND MATROX, ORDER OP REBEKAH9, TO BE HELD MONDAY. . Mr. Robert M. Foster. The body of the late Mrs. Robert M. Foster arrived In Portland last night from Astoria. The funeral will be from the F. S. Dunning undertaking rooms. East Sixth and Alder streets, at 2 P. M. Monday, the services being conducted " y uuiin jawsun. or i no unurcn of the Good Shepherd. Burial will be at Rlverview. Mrs. Foster had been an active worker in the Episcopal Church, as well as in the Order of Re bekahs. the women's auxiliary to the I. O. O. F. She had been honored wJth the highest office in that fraternity, worthy grand matron, serving with distinction. The pallbearers will be G. C. Morris. C-' H. Thomas, Charles Mar tin. Oeorge VaupeL William Laycock and E. F. Loom is ISSUES OF STRIKE : AHEHOW DISPUTED Teamsters Say Wage Question Is All; Closed Shop, Em- , ployers Declare. ARBITRATION NOT NEAR Draymen's Association Officer Says Men Will Be Dealt With as Indl- viduals Only "We Can Fight," TTnions Retort. The teamsters' strike is now at the strge whpre the two sides are totally at variance as to the real matter at issue. The employing draymen assert with positlveness that it is not a question of wages that they are paying the union scale, and in some instances more, to the non-union men in their employ, but that the real issue is the open shop. The union leaders assert with equal positiveness that' the open shop does not enter into"the Issues of the contro versy, but that it is a question simply and wholly of wages. This much is admitted by both sides: Three years ago the draymen and teamsters signed an agreement fixing a scale somewhat lower than the one submitted last May, which contained the two clauses: "New men allowed 15 days in which to Join the union," and "When hiring men, union men to have the preference when same are avail able." Agreement Not Renewed. It is also admitted by both sides that this agreement was renewed from y-ar to year until last Spring, when the union presented an agreement identi cal in form with the eld one with the exception of the wage scale and the length of time for which it was to be in effect, but that later the agreement was revised so, that if signed it would be effective for one year only. The draymen refused to sign the new agreement and the men struck. So far all is fairly clear, but the draymen now declare that they have been operating under the closed shop principle for three years, while the union representatives maintain that the latter part of the agreement does not provide for a strictly closed shop. "It has been a closed shop," said Thomas Gray, secretary of the Dray men's Association, yesterday. "The agreement providing that new men be allowed 15 days in which to Join the union made it so. If the new men did not join the union we could not keep them in our employ. "We will not arbitrate the present controversy. We are now paying the union scale and more In some instances and will take back such of the men as we have places for, treating them as individuals. Personally I have but one vacancy and I certainly shall not dis charge the men who have stood by me in this trouble to give employment to strikers." "The agreement does not provide for a closed shop," said Secretary Robinson of the Central Labor Council, yesterday. "The provision providing that preference shall be given union men shows that it was expected that the union men will work with nonunion men, hat the latter may be employed when union men are not available." "The clause providing that new men shall be given 15 days in which to Join the union was put in at the request of the employers three years ago," said Will Daly, president of the Central Coun cil, yesterday. "The draymen desired that provision in order that they might test the capabilities of the men before permanent positions were given to them. Wages Issue, Says Daly. "As I have stated heretofore, the only question at issue is one of wages. The teamsters have been working for three years under the identical agreement sub mitted with the exception of the change In the wage schedule." The resolution adapted toy the Central Labor Council, Friday night, was pre sented to Harry Cowgill of the Draymen's Association yesterday morning by Sec retary Robinson, but no reply had been made to the proposal up to a late hour yesterday, according to Mr. Robinson. Thomas Gray, of the Draymens' Asso ciation, yesterday gave out the follow ing statement: "At a meeting of representative citizens and merchants held at the Commercial Club at noon today to consider the labor situation, among other business consid ered was a request that the secretary of the Draymen's Association should fur nish the public through the medium of the press, with a statement of the de mands made by the Teamdrivers' Union and also the position of the Draymen's Association regarding the same. The following is a correct copy of the agree ment presented by the Teamdrivers" Union to the various draymen of this city for their signature: WAOE SCALE OP INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OB TEAMSTERS; LOCAL NO. 162. The Mma to take effect tho first day of June, 1910, and continue for from one to five years. Per Day. Wages for furniture van . drivers and helper -25 Wages for drivers of trucks and wagons of three tons capacity or over. . 8.00 Wages for lumpers 3.(H Waxes for drivers of watons of less than three tons capacity Z.75 Waarea for drivers of drays '..... 2.7 Wages for drivers of two-horse express wagons 2.30 Wages for drivers of -delivery watons. . 2.25 - Wages for new men 25 cents less than regular scale for first 30 days. Extra, hours less than one day. 35 cents per hour. Over time, time and one-half. Sundays and holi days, double time. New an en allowed IS days in which to Join the union. When hir ing men union men to have the preference wiien same are available. Ten hours shall constitute a day's work. Salary to be paid not less than twice a month. EXECUTIVE BOARD. LOCAL 162. Businaas Agent. ............... '. Employer i "On June 2 the draymen caused to be published in the dally papers a state ment in which they stated that the ques tion of wages did not enter into the con troversy between the members of the Teamdrivers' union and their employers: thai tl-.S only question at issue was w.:;!?Tr employers and employes 6hould have the freedom of in-divl-lual contract in the matter of employment, irrespective of whether or not an employer or employe waa a member of any organization. . "The officials of the labor union assert that the only question at issue is the in crease of the wage scale. This is not true; several of our members have been waited upon by committees from the Team drlvra" Union and In every instance they have been told that if they would return to work they would be paid the wages men tioned in the schedule, but In every in stance they have returned for answer that they could not return to work as in dividuals, but that our offer must be sub mitted to the union, or its officials, for their consideration. This shows con clusively that the paramount icsue with the officials of the labor unions is recog nition." . SOLE AGENTS FOR THE FAMOUS COWAN SOLID MAHOGANY FURNITURE ' Our stocks of Furniture, Floor Coverings, Drapery and Decorative Materials have been selected for people who take pride in their homes and who want to secure the largest possible return in comfort," beauty and service for the price they pay. You will find here just the sort of furnishings that people of taste are buying in the best shops, of the country, and you will be waited upon by salesmen thoroughly familiar with correct furnishings and entirely competent to advise or assist you if you desire it. Fifth and Stark HOOD RIVER GREAT Secretary Wilson Enthuses Over What He Sees There. MORE FARMERS NEEDED Cabinet Member Says World Will Be Oregon's Market When Pan ama Canal Is Completed. Day to Be Spent Here. James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture in the Cabinet of President Taft, accom panied by Jasper Wilson, his son and secretary, returned last night from a two- i day trip to Hood River and the Mount j Hood, district. The Secretary immediate- j ly announced that Oregon farmers and horticulturists were in position to play an imporant part in the solution of the high cost of living in all parts of the world. , "Just as soon as that canal Is com- ! pie ted across the Isthmus of Panama, I and you people get access to it, you will have the markets of the world at your feet," said the Secretary. "I have seen some of the most wonder ful natural soil in the world in the vicin ity of Hood River and along the route of our trip. The soil conditions consti tute the most striking thing I observed. They are highly mineralized, probably the result of volcanic action of past ages, and if well farmed and well managed they will outlast those of most other places. ""You have a natural condition out here in Oregon that is not only remarkable, but is something that advocates of dry farming in the Middle VVest have at tempted to produce artificially. Dust Preserves Moisture. "Have you ever noticed that wher ever you go in Oregon, outside of the paved districts of the cities, the ground is covered by a fine, dry dust? I found , that dust wherever I went, and I made as close a study of it as possible under hasty conditions. I found that by kicking it aside and scraping the hard ground un derneath there was moisture in plenty for the raising of any fruit crop, or most any other crop. The dust is a natural mulch which preserves moisture In the soil. All it needs is the slight stirring which your orchardlsts give their plots to make it perfect. The cultivation is necessary to keep It from packing and cracking, which allows the moisture to escape. Going up toward Mount Hood we frequently walked to ease the horses, and I frequently scraped down to the moisture in the packed road. "I am satisfied that one of the great elements which enters Into the merits of the Hood River and the Oregon apple is the fact that the mineral qualities of the soil are not washed out through irri gation. The rainfall of the west slope of the Cascades Is sufficient to raise the crop, and the fruit receives the benefit of the ingredients of the soil in which it is planted. World Is Oregon's Market.""' "Oregon farmers should feel encour aged at the outlook for the future. The Panama Canal will be in use within a few years, and they should get ready to utilize that great American enterprise which will be open to American shipping. You can put your products into foreign countries, and need not be afraid of either the quantity or quality yon raise being detrimental to prices. For years to come, the rich people of the world will buy your fruit, and when you raise so much that they are overtsocked, the poor people of the same neighborhoods will take it. In Paris a Hood River apple has been known to sell for 40 cents. That sum of money would represent the en tire cost of keeping a peasant family one day. One apple divided among such a family would hardly be sufficient food for a day. "The high cost of living will be re duced by the farmer, and in doing that the farmer will make -fust n mtifh money as h will under present con ditions. The land is not now being used intensively as it will be In later years, and land that has been con sidered useless will be found highly profitable under the right kind of farming. The Department of Agricul ture is maintaining IS experimental stations to help the farmer, and we ere scouring the world "for roots and plants that will thrive oa such lands. We J.'G. Maek have brought the macaroni wheat, al falfa and clover from Siberia, where such products are inured to cold and drouth, and we are aiding the farmer to secure roots which will fertilize the soils which have been worn out by Summer-fallowing. Summer-fallowing is a curse to the land, and is slowly be ing abandoned. Intensified Farming Urged. - "Out here in Oregon you should farm Intensively, and devote time to the poultry and dairy business. The secret of successful poultryraloicg is cheap grain. On cheap food of th.t character depends the profits of the r-uslness. No state has a better chance to raise cheap chicken-feed. You have ideal dairying conditions because of the great amount of natural forage on which the cattle can feed, as well as the better alfalfa fields. "And the farmer should feel rood over the fact that the tendency of the times is for the boy to drift back from the city to the farm. The boy that is now drifting from the farm to the city Is the lad who doesn't know any thing about farming. You have a great agricultural college in Oregon, but I venture to say that with all the boys who complete the course in scientitio farming, and with all the demand thore is throughout the country for such men, not one boy graduate can be hired in this state. In Iowa, we graduated 100 this year in the full four-year course, and every one of them either went to work for himself or returned to his father s farm to take charge of it. Whenever the farmer dad finds that the farmer son knows more about the business than his progenitor, the 'old man' will turn over the place. "In the Bast lands are owned in many instances by Investors. They have been unable to hire agricultural college boys to take charge. Policy to Settlers Liberal. "You have hundreds of good farmers in Oregon. My message to them would be to plant more acres as fast as they can. Land must not be idle in this country, where it can be made to pro duce any of the elements whlcsf are needed to feed the world. Oregon needs hundreds of good farmers, and we are going to help them all we can. "There have been so many settlers allowed -to go Into the forest reserve near Hood River and Mount Hood that there are not many good places left, but wherever the soil can be obtained and the settler is in good faith I am going to let him if I ean. It may as well be understood that I am not going to countenance speculation in lands in any form. "I find that many of the applications which have been personally examined by me are for lands that are -rather heavily timbered, and it would appear that the element of speculation may enter into the matter. I am anxious to help the bona tide settler, but I will not stand for anything else." Mr. Wilson expressed the opinion that apples could be successfully raised at a considerably higher alti tude than Hood River, and that - the district would continue to spread with experiment. He thought 3000 feet al titude a safe limit, but advised proceed ing cautiously. The Secretary of Agriculture will re main at the Portland over Sunday, planning to proceed on his journey Monday morning. Until the present Journey began. Secretary Wilson had been absent from his desk but six days in the past 10 months. .. "But I owe the West at least one visit per annum," said the Secretary. "I am going to keep It up as long as I am on the Job. I found many nice people in and around Hood River, and am. glad I called on them." - PIONEER SMELTERMAN DIES S. C. Chase, Wbo Built Plant at Linnton, Passes Away. S. C. Chase, at one time owner of large smelting and mining enterprises in this state, died yesterday morning at the St. Charles Hotel, which had been his home for more than ten years. He waa 0 years of age. In his prime Mr. Chase was superin tendent of the smelting and refining plant at Omaha that formed the nucleus for the present plant of the American Smelting & Refining Company in that city. Later he came to Linnton. where he erected a smelter which was success fully operated for a number of years. He also engaged in mining and for a time fortune smiled upon him. The panic of 1893 proved financially disas trous to him and he could not recover his losses. Since then he had been living in Portland. Mr. Chase was never married. Vsanpr American machinery, the Banrkok MfcnufsLCturlnsT Company; tre only ic plant In ouuh. msws u iobm a as4 . , Correct and Beautiful Furnishings Since you must have Furniture, Rug?, Carpets and draperies, why not demand things -beautiful-in themselves, and harmonious in combina tion? It is folly to choose ill-designed or tawdry furniture, when for the same amount of money you can secure the other kind. And it is folly to allow your rooms to be made crude or commonplace when a little study, plus a little expert advice, will make them harmonious and distinctive. Co. MERGER IS FORMED Power, Gas, Electric, Trans mission Companies Unite. THREE STATES INVOLVED Pacific Power & Light Company Takes Over Vast Holdings In Ore gon, Washington and Idaho. Deal Represents Millions. Pinal steps in the transaction by which a large number of gas, electric and water power plants In Oregon, Washington and Idaho are merged under the name of the facltlc Power &. Light Company, a S7.5O0.- 000 operating corporation, were taken yes- leruay. These properties include the former holdings of the Northwest Corporation. part of the holdings of the Strahorn in terests in the Yakima Valley and the power and lighting system formerly owned by the Wasco Warehouse & Mill ing company of The Dalles. Deeds Given by All Corporations. Negotiations and procedure under the merger plan have been going forward for several months under the direction of Guy W. Talbot, who is the Northwest represent""- of the Electric Bond & Share Company and president of the Pa- citic Power &. Light Company. To bring the numerous plants and public service systems under the control of the Pacific Power & Light Company, temporary cor porations were organized including the Yakima-Pasco Power Company, the Co- lumoia rorer & Light Company, the Astoria Electric Company and the Walla walla Valley Railway Company. . These companies have now all deeded their holdings to the Pacific Power & Light Company and will go out of exist ence with the exception of the Walla Walla valley Railway Company which will be continued as a subsidiary com pany. The property deeded by the Yakima- Pasco Power Company includes lighting, gas or water systems at Pasco, Kenne- wick, Benton City, Sunny side, Mabton, Wapato and North Yakima in Washing ton and franchises in several other towns in the Yakima Valley. Many Systems Transferred. Light & Power Company embraces the ' gas and electric lighting plants at Pen dleton and Lewlston and the electric lighting systems at Walla Walla, Wash ington, and Adams, Athena, Milton, Free water, The Dalles and Dufur. Oregon, and the transmission line from Walla Walla to Pasco, now under construction. The Walla Walla Valley Railway Com pany consists of the city system In Walla Walla and an interurbah line between that city and Milton and Freewater, Ore gon. The Astoria Electric Company lights Astoria and operates a streetcar system. Generating Plants Taken Over. Included also in the deeds to the' Pa cific Power & Light Company are the water power generating plants on the Walla Walla River, the one on the White River in Oregon near its conflu ence with the Deschutes, and one on- the Nachez River near North Yakima, Wash ington. The generating capacity of the three plants Is now 15,000-horsepower which will be enlarged, but to what ex tent depends on the reports of hydraulic engineers who are now engaged in sur veys. It is understood also that the Pacific Power & Light Company has options on several other properties in the North west which are likely to be taken up soon The Pacific Power &. Light Company will be the permanent operating corpora tion. . and the head office will be main tained in Portland. The present officers are temporary but permanent officers will be elected within a few daya Next week the company will move from, the Lewis building to a suite of 12 rooms on the 13tn floor of the new Spalding building, at Third and Washington. Two Speeders Arrested. - J- B. Yeton was arrested yesterday aft ernoon by Patrolman Sims, at Grand avenue and East Glisan street. , when , going at the rate of 25 miles in his auto- Fifth and Stark mobile. The builder of Portland's new est skyscraper took his arrest in good part, and will be in Police Court Monday to answer to the charge. Wendell K. Phillips was arrested at Union avenue and Everett street . for speeding, and will appear Monday in court. PROPERTY-OWNERS TO PAY City Wins Snit Regarding Payment for Water Mains. The case of Joseph Closset and J. R. O'Neill against the City of Portland, which involved the authority of the City Council to assess the cost of aux iliary water mains upon the abutting property, was yesterday decided in favor of the city by Judge R, a. Mor row, of the Circuit Court. The de cision is held to be important for the city and, unless reversed by the higher : court, will settle for all time a question that has been a bugbear to the legal department. The plaintiffs had been ' assessed their pro rata share for paying for the recently installed auxiliary water main but demurred on the grounds that the work should be paid for by a special bond Issue instead of by as sessment. O'Neill's assessment was 194.80 and Clossefs $151.76. The property involved is on Hoyt street. The city contended that the cost of the improvement should be met by the property-owners by special assessment, in accordance with the assessing or dinance passed by the City Council last February. In rendering his de cision. Judge Morrow coincided with the view of the city attorney that it was optional with the city either to assess the property or to Issue honds to pay for the system, including fire hydrants and lateral connections, and fZZZ?1? ne.'d that the Procedure taken by the city was proper. EXPERT COUNSEL SOUGHT Prosecution of Physician for Cnlp . able Negligence May Result. Assistant District Attorney Fitzgerald is seeking expert medical advice in his investigations into the death of Vera Hall on the operating table of Dr. J J Rosenberg last Sunday. The question he wishes to determine is whether Dr Rosenberg was culpably lax in failing to use greater precautions against death after the administration of chloroform The facts that the patient suffered from a weak heart, that no expert assistant was employed and that the girl's tight ciothing was not loosened during the attempt to resuscitate her, are all held to Indicate that the physician did not use proper diligence, and action may be taken against him on that theory that a criminal operation was contemplated fails to receive supporting CARD OF TKABfKS. We wisn to extend our thanks to our many friends extending their help and last respects to our dear beloved. Mrs. Rosalie Beaulieu. We also thank the lodges for the bautiful floral pieces. T. E. BEAULIEU. MRS. ROSE BICE. MRS. JOSIE LEONARD. For Breakfast- with cream or milk The smile that follows will last all day j "The Memory Lingers" Sold by Grocers. r .svsfc5li. POSTUM CEREAL COMPANY, Ltd. Battle Creek Micb. Post Toasties