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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 19, 1913)
THE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND. JANUARY 19, 16 Sill 10 BE SUBMITTED V. C. Benbow Will Support Of ficial Charter With Some Modification. WOOD DRAFT IS OPPOSED Oreatcr Hixt Side Association, Com posed of Federated Clubs, In clor?e Administration Meas ure With Amendments. Unless something develops to inter lrp with the present plans, the peopl of Portland will be given an oppor tunlty at the primary nominating elec tion in April to vote on the question of adoption of a commission form of gov ernment for this city. As things stand, nothing but the in jection of the so-called Wood short charter or some such instrument as that, which defeated the "official" char ter last election, can deprive the voters of the direct vote on changing the form of government. Mayor Rushlight and V. C. lienbow liave agreed to a plan whrreby Mr. Ben bow's charter will not be put on the ballot, as he was for a time demanding, but he is to withhold it and some of the points upon which he Insists are to be incorporated in the "official" charter and it alone is to be submitted for vol The Mayor Intends calling a meeting or the members of the old "official charter commission for the purpose of going over the Benbow draft and sorting certain features of it in the "official" charter. With these Included, Mr. Benbow and his friends will sup port the charter. "Short" barter To lie Fought. Whether the advocates nT the "short charter, compiled by C. K. S. Wood et al.. n ill again go into court to have that Instrument put on the ballot Is unknown, but, if they do. it is the plan to make a bi tight on it and to have a general campaign among the improve xnent clubs and other organisations for the "official" charter. The City (Coun cil will absolutely refuse to submit but on" draft. The "official" charter provides for a Mijtr and five Vminilsnioners and Auditor, all to b lwt-d by the people; ity Attorney, City Treasurer and Mu nicipal Judsre, to he appointed by the Mayor and Commissioners, as are all other subordinates; with civil service 3fft Intact. The government of the city Js to be placed in the hands of the Mayor and Commissioners and they are to be held responsible for everything Kach Commissioner if to be the head of a municipal departonent. The iSreater East Side Association, composed of delegates from civic ini provemnt cluhs, in session Friday night In the Hotel Clifford, indorsed the official commission charter, pro vided a few amendments are made to the original draft to conform to pre visions in the Benbow charter. This action was. taken on the recommenda tion of Mr. Benbow, wno drafted the Benbow aharter. Mr. Benbaw addressed the associa tion on the commission form declaring that he was not wedded so closely to the Benbow charter as to Insist on it at the risk of defeating the commis sion idea. Henbon Invokes Aid. "The official commission charter," said Mr. Benbow, "will be again sub mitted to he vote of the people at the city election In June. Of course. If the so-called Benbow charter should also be submitted it would mean de feat of tho charter idea,, and that Is something I do not want to happen. 1 favor the commission form and be cause I may not be able to get my Idea lined entirely I don't want the principle defeated. The promoters of the official charter have agreed to make a few changes. They have agreed to make It read that all contracts shall be let to the lowest responsible bidder and bonds shall be sold to the highest bidder, which is not in the original charter. Also the charter will read so that the present franchises will not be affirmed. However, they declined to change the manner of granting franchises so that the people shall have their grnntinjj but that is a matter! which will bo submitted specially to ; a vote of the people. With these changes I think we should support the charter. It will tiive us a commission government and that is what we all want" A. U Barbur. C. C. Hall and G. B. JVitson were appointed a committee from this association to take up the matter of inserting the changes whfch Mr. Benbow paid had been agreed to. i. H. Da i son. of the Sunnyside Im provement Association, declared that the Sunnyside Club had Initiated a movement to have the Lone Fir Cemet ery of 30 acres and St. Mary's Cemetery vacated, burials stopped in both and the tracts made into parks. OREGON UNIVERSITY KNOCKS AT DOOR OF HUNDREDS IN REMOTE DISTRICTS Correspondence Department of Eugene Institution Has Bankers, Laborers, Clerygmen, Mill Hands, Lawyers and Section Hands Enrolled in Variety of Branches and Giving Good Accounts of Themselves. r nkf'P. k ) 1 V PS.AV3 I c.uuut V wco j . r I 7 FSK r rv' I miii t"1 v f mm J U--J 1- -A. r LJt -' I " '"" fi..nn-f (.inn mAHT r f f- ( ..,, -n M-f7 t- ' , mm r L '" r " yf "' u VTVERSITY OF ORKGOX, Kngene. I Jan. IS. In every county In Ore gon except one Lake there ure students doing work at this university There was a student In Lake County,; but he completed his course. Laborers, sawmill hands, loggers, erks, ministers of the gospel, mes senger boys, farmers and farm hands. housekeepers in great numbers and teachers, lawyers, one bank clerk, and section hands on the railroad are regu larly enrolled members of the student body of the University of Oregon. Many of these have never seen the campus at Kugene. Many have never met the professor at whose commands they are burning the midnight oil. None of them has ever worn the dinky little green cap of the freshman or gone wild shouting '"osky-wow-wow," and mnnv might not even recognize tne college yell. Nevertheless, the univer sity has no more faithful students than he scattered legion which, in all parts of the state. Is doing work in the de partment of correspondence study. Correspondence Conran Good, The correspondence study movement has grown up almost unnoticed. Miss Mozelle Hair, secretary of the extension department, addressed the faculty of the University at its "colloquium" meet- ng this week and sketched the mag nitude the work had attained. Many of the faculty had long been giving their spare time to correcting correspondence papers and writing to their distant adult students, but few realized the aggregate amount that was being ac complished by the whole body. An ex perience meeting followed in which manr related instances of determined truggles for self-education in remote places. Students may come to college for many reasons, some earnestly seeking nowledge and some merely because hey are sent. The correspondence stu dent, on the other hand, enrolls for just one purpose work. There are i more than 300 now, and the professors who handle their papers are agreed j that they go at their work with a bull- og tenacity and earnest purpose that would be more than a credit to the tudents-in-residence at any university in the land. Logger Studies Literature. One sawmill hand is studying Eng lish. Another puts in his leisure hours fth a college algebra, gradually equipping himself with a knowledge of mathematics. A laborer is studying in order to become a surveyor. One man who works for wages in a logging camp is becoming weti-reaa in tne His tory of Oregon, while another In a dif ferent part of the state is studying literature. A messenger boy is taking 1 ' . vx , J Map Miowinjt IJImV ributfon of lnlverwlty of Urecon Correspondence Student Approximately In Iroportlon of Pop ulntlon, and Portrait of Mlsa Mozelle Hair, Secretary of Extension Depart ment. subjects which he hopes -will make up his deficiencies of preparation and en able him to enter the University as a regular student-in-resldence. Ministers, of whom there are several on the roll, specialize principally in literature and history" to enable them to speak with a fuller and more exact knowledge when they face audiences. A farmer is enrolled as a student of botany and several farmhands are tak ing; various subjects, principally with the hope of some day entering college. Allen Is Creditable Student. To enumerate the branches studied by housekeepers and school teachers would be to give almost the whole list of the subjects offered. For many teachers, the university offers the only hope of passing examinations, holding on to their means of livelihood, or ob taining promotion. Clerks, a bank teller, and lawyers give most of their attention to economics, political sci ence, money and banking and such sub jects. One of the best students is a section hand on the railroad, a man of foreign birth who has become a cred itable student of the English language. There are more than a dozen univer sities In the United States giving cor respondence courses but none that has any considerable enrollment so tar irom the facilities of higher education as the rural workers in many of the less accessible portions of Oregon. When the University of Oregon established this department' In 1907. it was In re .sponse to a noticeable demand. . It has grown practically without advertising and without funds, supported by the fact that members of the faculty have been willing to devote to it their leis ure hours, until now it takes no prophet to see the time when the University of Oregon will have more students away from the campus than in residence. AbaentceH at Disadvantage. Work is not made easy for the dis tant student. He has to answer every nuestion his instructor asks, while the student-in-residence often escapes such searching examination because the Questions are divided among different members of the class. The helpful hint that is given so freely in the class room is. with the correspondence stu dent and his professor, a matter of writing at least a letter apiece, and a delay of several days. For these rea sons, it takes a candidate a long time to earn a full-grade college credit in this way. Out of more than 300 hard working students last year only 51 ob tuh)ed certificates of completion. The remainder are still "plugging" away under difficulties not easily appreciated by one whose education is furnished him as a gift. The University of Oregon is the most liberal of all colleges in the terms on which correspondence students are tak en. The registration lee or V tails short of paying the postage and sta tionery the university uses In writing to the student and tne cost oi tne ex tension Monitor, the little monthly magazine that keeps the absent stu dents in touch with each other and with the university. Variety of Courses Taken. Among the courses in which students are now enrolled are: Algeora, Botany, physics, English classics, English com position, Oregon nistory, pnysioiogy plane geometry, solid geometry, ad vanced algebra, analytic geometry, analytical mechanics, British poets. calculus, child study, economics, edu cational psychology, journalism, news paper correspondence, short story, eie mentary electricity, electricity and magnetism, English composition, ad vanced history and teaching of physics, mechanical drawing, money and. bank ing, physical education and personal hveiene. plane trigonometry, psycnoi ogv. recent European history, school administration, school management, art of teaching. Shakespeare, sociology, sound and music, and teaching of high school mathematics. GERMAN DISCIPLINE STRICT Heroism of Man Is Kcwardcd With Prison Sentence. BERLIN. Jan. IS. (Special.) The one unpardonable crime in Germany is resistance to constituted authority, and especially to military authority. Sen tences of imprisonment for most misde meanors and felonies are on the aver aire extremely llsrht. compared to the sentences imposed In American courts, but the soldier who disobeys the order of his superior officer, or the civilian who disobt'ya a policeman, may be sure of a punishment out of all comparison to that inflicted for really nrrave crimes. That the order disobeyed was Illegal or inhuman makes no difference in practice, although legally anyone is Justificed in disobeyinar an order to do a wrongful act. The leftal aspect van ishes when the matter is one of uphold ing authority, and the culprit is pun ished severely on general principles. The latest case illustrative of this is reported from Kast Prussia. Reservists had been called in for 14 days' practice, and durinjr. this period aviators gave an exhibition. The crowd Insisted on breaking throu-rn th barriers sur rounding the aviation field and an un der officer ordered a draproon to ride his horse into the crowd. Gustav Pieper. a reservist who happened to be in the crowd, seeing- women and chil dren threatened by the charging horse, seised the bridle and held the animal, lie has just been sentenced to seven inonth imprisonment. MILD CLIMATE SEEKERS CHILLED BY WINTRY BLASTS IN CALIFORNIA Damage to Citrus Industry Is Serious Residents of Portland and Other Northwest Points Pjnd Interest in Novel Experiences in Sunny Southland. Hood Uiirr Has Xcn Store. HVn RIVER. Or.. Jan. IS. (Spe cial. I Barde & Leavitt. who operate rhain of nien"i furnishing stores in the Willamette Valley, have secured a lo cation on Onk street In this city snd pMied for buMness Saturday. The other stores of the firm are located at valrm. Corvallis and Eugene. LOS ANGELES. Jan. 18. (Special.) The Influx of Winter visitors from the Northwest and from the East this year was most inopportune ly limed, for many of them struck a spell of weather worse than that they had run away from at their own homes. The crimp put In the citrus Industry Is serious. In the San Bernardino. Redlands and Riverside districts, on the three coldest days, every orange grower passed his nights "smudging" his groves and his days mournfully comparing notes with his neighbors and telling them how the climate waa changing. Front re liable sources in the heart of the orange district It was learned beyond question that from SO to SO per cent of the orange crop in Ean Bernardino and Riverside Counties was ruined and the big shippers aaid frankly that not an orange would be shipped from the two counties this year. Other districts fared about as bad. Other Industries Offer Hope. Despite the Indisputable facts, the real estate men are shouting that the orange crop was not seriously damaged ana that even if tne oranges oia xreeze thev will not be Injured. There is hopeful sign, however, in this lsjid of perpetual boosting, and that is that a large number of people agree with Frank Wiggins, the veteran secretary of the Los Angeles Chamber of Com merce, that it is foolish to dispute the facts and that It Is far better to point to the fact that Southern California has other industries and virtues than orange growing and climate. Wiggins issued a statement soon after the freeze pointing out many important industries, producing millions annual ly, that were not affected by the freeze. Dr. J. Whltromb Brougher, former pastor of the White Temple In Port land, and who still calls Portland his home, is having his troubles with love. It is not the scriptural kind of love that is bothering Mr. Brougher. And to combat this love affliction that is troubling Dr. Brougher he has been appointed a parole officer by Judge Hutton of the Superior Court and has assumed charge of the young man, Francis Olson, whose love for Miss Anne Overland, a teacher In a local kindergarten, was wo great that he couldn't keep from expressing bis de votion, j Olson was so persistent In tha face1 of objections that he was finally rested and examined as to his sanity. lie was officially found to be as sane I possible task to convince him to keep away if the young lady did not wish to see him. It seems an almost lin gs anyone on every possible FUDject except that relating to his heart. The Court pondered for some time on the question whether great love was ail ferent from Insanity. Olson Is a member of the Y. M. C. A. and a member of Dr. Brougher's church. He is not of the swash-buck- line type of heroes of fiction. He stolidly told the members of the lunacy commission that he would not and could not give up his love for Miss Overland. Whereupon Judge Hutton ordered the young man's friends to place him in a private sanitarium for a month. It was the court s iaea mat if at the end of a month the young man apperaed cured the insanity pro ceedings would be dropped; but if he was still obsessed with the idea that the way to win a woman's heart is by dogging her footsteps, then he was to be sent to an asylum for an in definite period. But Olson refused to go to a sani tarium. Dr. Brougher and other friends of the young man told the court they would endeavor to have him placed un der proper restraint. Olson was haled Into court again, for he refused even to promise to keep away from Miss Over land. He loved her and always would love her. he said, although Miss Over land told him repeatedly in private and at least in open court that his love was hopeless, as she was engaged to marry another man. Finally Olson promised to be good, but he begged Miss Overland In the courtroom not to ignore him if they met on the streets. Young; AVomaa Lenient. "I will speak to you, certainly," she replied, "but I will not converse with you and you must not call me up on the phone or write to me." Dr. Brougher was determined upon by the court for the parole officer to have charge of Olson and try to cure him of his Infatuation. Dr. Brougher has had several interviews with the young man and tried to show him the folly of persisting in forcing his at tentions upon any young woman who does not wish to receive them. "I have tried to help in this strange tangle," said Pr. Brougher, "but I have not been able to accomplish much. Olson con fessed to me his love for Miss Overland and asked my advice before it came to the attention of the courts. I told him Dr. John Bcntzien, assistant pastor of the Temple Baptist Church, also a for mer Portland clergyman, recently of ficiated at an interesting wedding, untting two young people who made love and planned the wedding by wire less telephone. Even the proposal was made "through the air" when the young man and his sweetheart were 30 miles apart. Air Transmits Proposal. Kendall Douglas, a Long Beach youth, was the groom. One day as he sat with the . complicated receiver of the wireless telephone apparatus at his ear he heard a voice. It was that of a girl In Los Angeles. He had invented the apparatus and was testing it; he had arranged with her to speak to him at this certain minute and he sat with the receiver awaiting the trial of the instrument, which had been duplicated at the home of the young woman. When she spoke, he answered he was sure the telephone was a success. Then he dared say into the air the words he had never dared to utter when in her presence. It did not occur to either that there was danger of eavesdropping. Miss Katherine Thorpe accepted young Douglas on the spot. And it is related that C. H. Kessler and R. H. Shimek, wireless operators on the Pacific Mail liner San Jose, a hundred miles off the coast, bound from Panama to San Francisco, were -bewildered at hearing the proposal through their Instrument. They declare they did not lose a word of the fond exchange, though when they reached Kan Francisco they re fused to tell the waterfront reporters what the "fellow talking to his sweet heart by wireless telephone" said. As;ed Oregon Woman Wetli, Still a third former Portland preacher, now located In Los Angeles, had an interesting experience the other day when ha united In marriage an Oregon woman and her sweetheart. Dr. Charles Kdward Locke, pastor of the First Methodist Church, was called upon to perform the marriage ceremony for Mrs. Lncinda C. Taylor, of Salem and SUverton, Oregon, and Reuben Stroud, a wealthy farmer of Alhambra. The bride confessed to 60 years, and the groom is 72 years old. "Now take care of this girl." was Dr. Locke's advice to the bridegroom after the ceremony. Mrs. Stroud, who as Mrs. Taylor was prominent in club and church circles in her Oregon home, and president of the W. C. T. U. there, first met Stroud about a year ago. The friendship that started then grew into love and all reckoning of age was soon forgotten, so they confessed in Dr. Locke's study. The newly-weds have gone to Florida for their honeymoon. An interesting TV inter visitor now spending a few months here is Thomas Ranahan, of Boise, Idaho, who was a familiar character here when Los An geles was a pueblo. He is accompanied by his wife and is showing her points of Interest that he remembers from the time he drove a stage between here and Santa Barbara before the coming of the railroad. Karly Days Recalled. Ranahan was for years a scout on the plains under General Forsythe, rider of the pony express and a driver on the Overland and Santa Fe stage lines. During his days on the plains as a scout he was associated with Buffalo Bill, Wild Bill and others who became famous through the Indian wars. He was driver of the stage out of Atchison Kan, on- June 9, 1866, which was the last mall stage that ever crossed the plains on the Overland route. In his discussion of his early West ern experiences Ranahan relates many incidents of California during the year 1874, at which time he handled "the ribbons" for the stage company that operated between Los Angeles and Santa Barbara. He tells of the races that the stage company ran with the little coastwise vessels with which it competed between the two points. The objective point of the stage company was Soledad. then the terminus of the railroad from San Francisco. , Mrs. Etta Carney, of 422 South Ave nue Nineteen, is sorry sne ever met Henry Schultz, a roomer at her sister s boarding-house at Forrest Grove, Or. Schultz ended his life recently at Port. land. This wasn't of much consequence to Mrs. Carney here, but on his body a nost-card photograph of Mrs. Carney, with a note from her, was found. And to cap the climax it develops that Schultz, who posed as a wealthy miner on the occasion of their only meettn at her sister's house last September, Is alleged to hare been a convict on pa role from the Oregon Penitentiary. Friendship Is Denied. Mrs. Carney says she "was afraid of Schultz" the minute she saw him: that he followed her with his eyes wherever she went. When she returned to Los Angeles she received a letter from him in which he hoped she had a pleasant and safe Journey and that they would soon meet again. "I answered this letter in a friend y tonc," says Mrs. Carney. "Aside from that I have never written him nor have I even known the man more than once and I wish I hadn't met hlra then. "I cannot understand where he could have secured a photograph of me unless he had taken it from my sisters home. He certainly had his nerve, too, keeping my picture on him when he killed himself. It just goes to show how easily one can. be implicated in something of which he or she knows nothing. 'If there s a woman back ot his sui cide, it's not 1." OF E IDEAS OS COOIT PROCEDlRb ARK CRITICISED. Orecon Constitution as Amended Provides Widest Discretion In Justices, Says Duniway. PORTLAND, Jan. 18. (To the Eli tor.) There has been a good deal pub llshed In the papers which is inac curate about reforming our legal pro cedure. In The Oregonian January 12, the address of Judge Carey to the State Bar Association was published, and it contains such an incorrect statement that I am moved to write this letter, furnishing a correct statement in this regard. The part of Judge Carey s address which I wish to call attention to was published as follows: Technicalities held accountable One of the moit noticeable features of the Ameri can system Is that the courts here are held to such strict accountability for error in the acceDtance or exclusion of evidence in a trial. Much of the time of the courts is taken up with the consideration of the tech nical rules and their application to trial evidence, whereas, unless It is manifest that the error is prejudlcal, it undoubtedly should and would in any proper system of juris prudence be treated as Inconsequential. The simple facts are these: For a great many years the statutes of Ore gon have provided as follows: Unon an appeal from a judgment, the same shall only be reviewed as to questions of law appearing upon the transcript, and hall only be reversed or modified lor error substantially affecting the rlBhts of appel lant. Lord s Oregon Laws, Sec. 556. In a note to this section of the code It is stated as follows, and a very large number of decisions of our Oregon Supreme Court cited to support the statement of the note, to-wit: Where the trial court erred in the admis sion of evidence and the Appellate Court can clearly see that It was impossible for such evidence to have Injured the appellant. the judgment will not be reversed. Thus it ought to appear that for many years the law of Oregon has not permitted "technicalities" in the admis- lon of evidence to injure anybody, and the statement of Judge Carey Is most inaccurate and unjust. In order to carry this non-technical doctrine further, in 1910, article 7 of the Constitution of Oregon was amend ed, and this provision Inserted: Until otherwise provided by law, upon appeal of any case to the Supreme Court, either party may have attached to the bill f exceptions tne wnoie testimony, the In structions of the court to the Jury, and any other matter material to the decision of the 1 1 lh. RunrnmA Onpt shall h. opinion, after consideration of aSl the mat ters tnua suDmittea, mat me judgment or the court appealed from was such as should have been rendered In the case, such Judg ment shall be affirmed notwithstanding any error committed during the trial; or if. in any respect, the Judgment appealed from should be changed, and the Supreme Court shall be ot opinion that It can determine what Judgment should have been entered in the court below, it shall direct such Judg ment to be entered in the same manner and with like effect as decrees are now entered in equity cases on appeal to the Supreme Court: provided, that nothing In this sec tion shall be construed to authorize the Supreme Court to find the defendant in a criminal case guilty of an offense for which a greater penalty is pro-ided than that of which the accused was convicted in the lower court. I wish to point out that our Consti tution, as amended, now provides the widest discretion in our Supreme Court and permits our Supreme Court to say that In its opinion a Judgment appealed from shall be affirmed notwithstand ing any error committed during the trial, or to further say, that the judg ment appealed from In any respect should be changed, and that it will de termine the change and direct said judgment to bo entered, with the only limitation being that nothing in the above section of the constitution shall be construed to authorize the Supreme Court to find the defendant in a crim inal case guilty of an offense for which a greater penalty is provided than that which the accused was convicted in the lower court. An examination of the recent opin ions In the Supreme Court will show that the Supreme Court has availed It self to a great extent of the power thus conferred upon the court- The only practical rule we have left in Oregon in the trial of cases as to It's the car higher up in the es teem of the automobile buying public. We have had to double our gigantic output and the de mand is more than doubling. Those who placed Winter orders for Ford cars last year were not disappointed in delivery. Every third ear is a Ford. Nearly 180,000 have been sold aud delivered. New prices runabout touring ear $000 town ear $800 with all equipment f. o. b. De troit. Get particulars from Ford Motor Company. 61 Union Ave., eorner East Da vis St., Portland, or direct from Detroit factory. Do You Want to Buy an Automobile On the Monthly Payment Plan? If you do, and haven't enough money to pay cash, we will lend you two-thirds of the purchase price. You can repay us in twelve monthly installments. No brokerago eharged aud only interest at 8 per cent per annum. INVESTIGATE THIS PLAN Automobile Buyers Finance Co. Thad Swcek, Gen. Mgr. 612 Swctland Building. Phone : Main 4871. the admission or rejection of evidence is the good common sense of the par ticular court before which the ques tion arises, with no method provided of etting precedents which shall be of any future value in other cases. The tirades about the "technicali ties of the law," which have been pub lished for so many years, have been successful in making a great change in the judicial system of Oregon. Those who are dissatisfied with the present judicial system of Oregon should point out the "reforms" which they have succeeded in bringing into the constitution and judicial system of Oregon, and point out that they are not satisfied with the said "reforms." but want further and other and dif ferent "reforms" worked upon the "re forms" which they have succeeded in obtaining in the recent past. The charge of "technicality" is the refuge of the careless, the Incompe tent, the party who has violated tne law. In order to have any civilized gov ernment there must be rules of law which are binding on every one, in cluding the courts; and there must be courts which will enforce said rules of law impartially upon every one, even upon themselves. In time we will return to a govern ment of law. RALPH R. DUNIWAY. member of the Municipal Dock Commission. ENGINEER' LOSES SAVINGS , W. Bailey Says Robbers Secure $853; 1'Ylends Scout Theory. With two blackened eyes and with out $855, which he had had the night before, J. W. Bailey, an engineer for Stone & Webster, contractors, was re leased from the City Jail yesterday morning, and now Detectives Moloney what became of his money. That he had it while on a drinking round of the North End saloons they say, is beyond question. Bailey says that he was beaten ana robbed at Sixth and Everett streets, half a -block from the police station, at 8 P. M., but the officers found where he had displayed a roll of money at a bar. near midnight. Friends of the man, in the presence of the detectives, tried to talk Bailey out of his contention that he had been robbed, but refused to explain them selves to the officers, and a theory is entertained that they may have taken the money for safe-keeping. Burgard Resigns IVom Council. Councilman Burgard yesterday ten ered his resignation as a member of the City Council. His successor will be elected soon by the Council. It is rumored that Burgard will be appointed to succeed George M. Cornwall as When In Portland stop at the Hot! Seward. Yon will find It one of tha nwrst moat artistic, modern and ele gantly appointed hotels In the Jiorth-n-est. Located at Tenth and Alder streets, in heart of retail and theater district. Rates $1 and up; with bath, 92 and up. 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