THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND. MARCH-. 15, 1914. HANDSOME HOUSE BUILT BY HEAD OF FAMILY WHO OCCUPY IT AS HOME William R. Bridges Designs Plan, Makes Own Concrete Blocks and Builds Attractive Domicile in Spare Hours. Actual Cost, Exclusive of Own "Work, $1800. ' The Portland Approval of East Couch Plan Sought by Committee. "Y" TO BRIDGE IS IDEA Association Will Be Formed to Get Behind Project South East Sidf 'f Starts Petition to Widen Powell Street to 60 Feet. 13 WIDENING MOVE ON mm : Among the several important move ments started on the East Side last week' is that to make East Couch 80 feet wide from East First to East Fourteenth streets, connect East Couch with Sandv boulevard, cut down the present grade at East Eleventh and connect the street with the Burnside bridge with a "Y" angle on an elevated roadway. In order to give the property owners who have started this movement op portunity to show what they can do, the improvement of East Couch has been held up. The contract for pav ing that street is all ready for final sanction. A committee of property owners, J. E. Widmer, W. R. Stokes, R. L. Zeller, F. M. Stokes and some others, are now Interviewing owners of property on East Couch in the hope of gettin their consent to the widening. It is Urged that to widen East Couch and . develop a moderate grade at the pres ent steep- point at East Eleventh street and connect it with Sandy bou levard would make it an ideal street for this growing section! The commit tee having the matter in charge is re ceiving encouragement. Many of the property owners, however, are hard to reach. "We believe that this widening can be done, said the committee in an ad dress to the property owners, "if the . property owners are willing and will cut their shoulders to the wheel. Of course it will cost some money, as all good things do, but compared to the amount of benefits the expense will be very small. The few buildings on the street that amount to anything can be arcaded, which will lessen the expense, i The time to do this is now if ever, be fore more buildings are erected and before hard surface is put down. The City Commissioners have been asked to delay letting the contract for hard surfacing for a short time, in order to give time to get an expression from all owners affected. Property Owners to Study Situation. "Nine-tenths of the traffic over Burn side bridge comes from and goes to points north of East Burnside street. This plan would give Burnside bridge a double approach and East Couch street, being on the north, would nat urally get far the greater portion of the travel. When the Burnside bridge is rebuilt, which must be done before many years, -'it may be placed in a straight line with West Burnside street. That will bring the east end of it in the center of the block between East Burnside and East Couch and both streets can then meet It In a 'Y' con nection." . An East Couch-street property own ers' association will be formed to take up the widening as soon as enough of the property owners have responded. It is believed that a wide street is needed to connect the Burnside bridge with Sandy boulevard, which is 80 feet wide and which is paved to the city limits. It is planned to make Sandy boulevard 80 feet wide from East Six teenth to East Twenty-eighth streets and the connection with Sandy boule vard will be made by extending East Couch through part of two blocks. It will have an easy grade, shorter route and give a double approach to Burn Side bridge. Move to Widen Powell Street. . In the South East Side a movement has been started to widen Powell be tween Milwaukie and East Eighteenth street from 50 to 60 feet. A petition signed by 50 per cent of the property owners has been submitted to Commis sioner Dieck and the South East Port land Boosters Club passed resolutions indorsing the proposed movement. Some of the property owners favored paving the street on the present width of, 60 feet, tout the greater number want it made 60 feet wide to correspond with the width of the rest of the street. Powell street is occupied with double tracks of the Brooklyn carline, which takes the main portion of the street. Powell is the city end of Powell Valley road, which carries a heavy traffic. It Is considered highly important that Powell should be widened to take care of this traffic. M v v. '? :q - hr -ite trtr- i' " ' -yr-yw rep - i 7T - rvx - 3 I ye-cs oy Pear j!z??-?a tczz REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Real estate transfers involving nego tiations of $5000 and over have been filed since the first of the month as follows: Frank M. Mulkey et al to Bnai Brith -Building Association, part block "B," city, warranty deed .$15,000 A- A. Linusley and. wife to Clarence R. Wagoner, part block 6, John son's Addition, warranty deed... 38,000 William H. Ellis to Sol Rosertfeld, undivided one-half interest lot ti, block ii. City of Portland, warranty deed . ., 10,750 Smith Wasoner Company to A. A. Undsley. lots 4, S. ti, 15, 29, 32, H3, 34, Sheltered Nook, warranty deed 6,500 Harry K. Wagoner et al to A. A. Lindsley, tot 1. east Vz lot 2. block 0. P. T. Smith's Addition to St. ' Johns, Warranty deed 12,000 Clarence R. Wagoner to A. A. Llnds ley, lot 3, block 1U, Laurelhurst, warranty deed 6,000 . Thomas Doonan to Joseph H. Nash, Int lO KnslwiHul. in Krtinti ."i township 1 south, range 3 east, warranty deed 5,000 IB. U Stevens, Sheriff, to H. R. Hirsch, lots 28, 2M, 30, block 13, Treniont Place, lots 18, lu. 20 block ; 7, Willamette Addition, lot 14, block 12, Foxchase Addition (assigned to Adam Mueller), Sheriffs certificate C.OCO C. H. Piggott to Clara A. Gale, lots 2. 3, 0, 7, block 8, Fulton, war ranty deed 10,000 J. C. Roberts and wife to Walter C. Brettell, east Vi lots I, 2, block 20. Hanson's Second Addition to East Portland, warranty deed 5,000 Alary E. Savage to Bert Shelton, lot L'aruther's Addition, warranty deed 10.000. nis own labor. Vartha r.. Adams to William Keid, lot 5. block 6, City View Park; also lot 4. block 0 City View Park Addition except that portion said lot deeded to P. R. L. & P. Co., warranty deed 5,000 J. M. Kichards and wife to Fred R. Johnson t al, lot 3, block 44, Pied mont, warranty deed 6,500 Alina Htoesslger et al to Clarence True Wilson, warranty deed 9.250 William E. Finzer and wife to Frank J. Richardson, lot 1, north 40 feet lot 2. block 10, Irvington, war ranty deed 0,500 Eva D. Burdln and husband to Frud- . . erlck W. Drake, lot 4, part lot 3, block 69, Laurehurst, Sheriffs warranty deed U.UOU J; C. Lubeck and wife to H. R. Trow bridge, lot 14. block 17. Vernon. 1 William R. Ellis to Sol Rosenfeld. un divided one-half interest, lot 6, block 8, City of Portland 10,750 J. C. Roberts and wife to Walter C. - . Brettell. east one-half -lots 1, 2. block 20, Hanson's second addition to East Portland 5.000 Frank M. Mulkey et al. to Bnai Brlth Building Association, part block "B," city 15,000 Edward M. Runyan and wife Jo J. C. Ainsworth, land beginning' 40 feet . , westerly from northeast corner, -block 66, Carter s Addition to Portland m Doonan to Joseph H. Nash, lot ( 10, Eastwood, in section 5, township 1 south, range 3 east 5,000 Robert B. Beat and wife to Christian Chrtstansen. lot 16. block 95. Irr-'""Ins-ton M..M, 5,500 CAHCELT any more pertinent ex emplif ication of the fruits of per severance and industry could be apparent than in the interesting and praiseworthy achievement of William R. Bridges, who lives at 221 East Forty-sixth street. He has faced many obstacles and handicaps and consistent ly overcome them, and as a result to- ay Mr. Bridges and his family of Ave children live in a handsome house that stands on the southwest corner of East Forty-sixth and Salmon streets. From all appearances the house Is built of natural stone, but such is not the case. It is made of concrete blocks, nearly all of which were made and all of them placed in position by Mr. Bridges dur ing his hours of recreation. About three and one-half years ago. faced with the problem of not being able to rent a satisfactory house and being the father of three healthy chil dren, Mr. Bridges bought a lot In the above locality and decided to erect a tenthouse while preparing his pros pectlve home. Having been born and raised in England, where dwellings are for the most part constructed of DricK and stone, he decided on a concrete block house. Lack of Training No Bar. During this time Mr. Bridges was proofreader on The Oregonian. and was not familiar with even the rudiments of masonry and concrete construction, but this lack of training did not deter him. He bought a block-making machine and started in to Investigate how others worked and went around among the people whom he saw mixing con crete in quest of the necessary informa tion. Disgusted with his efforts in this direction, he obtained a textbook on concrete construction from the Public Library and went ahead, although he admits that there is no royal road to working in concrete; on the contrary, it Is pretty strenuous. Mr. Bridges excavated a large part of his basement and built the wall of blocks 28x8x12 in dimension. De sirous of getting into the house as soon as possible, our amateur mason contracted the work of putting up the rough frame-or the house. The labor re quired in this job cost him lo0. later he- also contracted the plumbing, wiring and plastering. But aside from these auxiliary services, he nimseu placed in position every one of the thousands of concrete blocks that go to make up the house as it stands to day. He put in his own concrete steps and walks, laid the floors on the in side of his house and did the interior finishing. Actual ( out ISOO. The house complete as now finished actually cost Mr. Bridges $1S00, includ ing the cost of the furnace and all ma terial, as well as all labor, contracted for. This of course does not include The home looks like a stone-built structure. In the steel casts made from plaster of paris moulds provided by Mr. Bridges, the concrete was moulded in sizes varying from 20x14 inches to 8x3 inches. The building contains eight well-arranged rooms and is of two stories, with full basement. The house is now free from debt, and. although Mr. Bridges smilingly con fesses that the annual tax levy has not as yet been paid, he gave adequate as surance that it could and would be ac counted for speedily enough. .It took approximately three years of personal effort to construct the Bridges home, and it was practically completed several months ago, although its builder and owner lias not yet ceased to find opportunity for further work that might be spent profitably on it. Mr. Bridges was born in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, in the Midlands of England. When he was 3 years of age his father died, leaving his mother with four children. At the age of 10, having passed the necessary grades, he was allowed to quit school and started to work. Even then, or as early as he was capable of serious thought, he had an ambition to come to the Pacific Coast of the United States, about wtyfcjb. he had read interesting stories of the Inr dians and of pioneer achievement. At 15 he entered a seven-year appren ticeship as printer with the firm of Maxell, Watson & Viney, one of the largest printing and publishing houses in the world, which operated a branch of its London plant at Aylesbury. Ambitious to get ahead, the young apprentice commenced the study of Greek, Latin and French under the able guidance of Rev. C. W. Pearson, vicar of the Church -of England in his lo cality, and the knowledge thus gained has proved of inestimable benefit to Mr. Bridges in his profession. Deciding to come to the United Slates, Mr. Bridges, with his wife and two children arrived in Portland during the Lewis and Clark Fair, in 1905. "We were much impressed with Port land' from the very start," said Mr. Bridges, "because it so much resembled London, geographically. You know the Thames runs through London much the same as the Willamette River di vides Portland, one being about the dls tance from the Atlantic as the other is from the Pacific. "But things didn't pan out as I-figured, and for once In my life I be came discouraged. After a week or two in Portland we became restless and re solved to go'back, although our natural impulse and desire was to settle in Portland for good. I knew my old po sition was waiting for me, as the man ager had guaranteed that when I left, so I went to the Portland bank, which held my draft for $1000 and told the cashier that I wanted to have the draft transferred to London, as I Intended to return home. He dissuaded me from my determination to return to England. Learning that I was a proofreader by occupation, he suggested that I try my luck at The Oregonian, where the su perintendent gave me every considera tion and encouragement. "I 'was new to newspaper work but the boya were good to me and helped me to make good. "That, was 8V4 years ago and I have been working for The Oregonian ever since." Concrete House Is "Secret." Notwithstanding- Mr. Bridges' impor tant connection as head proofreader with The Oregonian, nobody on the paper knew much or anything about his concrete house until a few days ago and then only because a picture of it chanced to be seen by one of his as sociates. - Shortly after his arrival here, Mr. Bridges bought an acre on the Mount Scott carline, on which he built a house. Later he traded this for a dairy ranch at North Beach, Wash.', but he found he couldn't run a ranch and read proof at the same time, so be sold the stock on the place and rented the ranch until four years ago. when he sold the entire place. He put this money right back into other property, whic-h has in creased considerably in vllue. Mr. and Mrs. Bridges have five child ren: Bernard, aged 11; Clifford, aged 9; Margaret Hope, aged 6; Grade, aged 314, and Muriel Cornwall, aged 7 weeks. The two boys are now attending the Glencoe School. Grade's pet name is "Gipsy," in consideration of the fact that she was born in a tent house. "My wife is deserving of the larger share of the credit due on this house proposition," explained Mr. Bridges. "For she was perfectly willing to live in the tent house and put up with all the Inconveniences that that life.meant. It was not particularly an . ideal life. but it certainly was healthful, not to say interesting, especially when the silver thaw struck us, but we look back upon our experiences now with a good deal of pleasure. Work Made Recreation. "Many people have remarked at my work on the house and speak of it as a big task, but I do not view it in that light. I associated the Idea of recre ation with it, and a profitable recrea tion at that, and got lots of real fun and enjoyment out of my experiences. My duties in the proofroom being necessarily very strenuous and exact ing, my work on the house gives me the needed rest and relaxation, in short 'helps a fellow to keep young and healthy minded. "I will admit that when I started to lay the blocks I was a little nervous as to whether my efforts would meet with the sanction and approval of the building inspector, and one day after I had got considerable of the work done a man came along who Informed me he was the building- inspector. I immediately felt a cold -shiver run down my back. He remarked, "Are you doing this by the day or by the contract?' I replied 'By the day or part day.' He said, 'Isn't a man named Bridges building this house?" I replied, "Yes." 'He's with The Orego nian, isn't he?" 'Yes,' I said. I then said, 'How does this strike you is everything to your satisfaction?" He replied, 'Everything is O. K., and it's going to look fine.' I felt considerably relieved and Invited him to lunch with us, when he remarked, "I believe you are Bridges himself." I said, "You've got it right." "But," said he. 'I thought you were a newspaper man." I said. 'That's right, too.' At which we had a hearty laugh and are pretty good friends. . Labors Not Overdone. "I make It . a special point not to overdo things, but to work just as I feel disposed. - Furthermore It gives one something worth while to work for. There's a whole lot of real satis faction in actually building your own home, especially when one's wife en ters into the spirit of the thing. And then there are the children doing it for them. Yes, it is quite worth while." A glance at Mr. Bridges' face, show ing healthy color, good nature and en thusiasm, lends full support to his contention that his out of door "recre ation" has exerted a beneficial effect on his health and he Is satisfied that his effort in building his own .home has been altogether worth while and Its own reward. In indifferent health at the begin ning of his building operations, Mr. Bridges has improved in this respect to a marked degree, which he at tributes largely to the healthful, not to say remunerative, exercise obtained in his house-building hobby. Personally he considers his work In no degree ex traordinary, admitting that it is square ly up to the individual himself whether he makes good in any endeavor he tackles in this great Pacific Coast country of splendid opportunity. BRISK TRADE EXPECTED REALTY BROKER PREDICTS ACTIV ITY IN LOCAL MARKET. 4 '. Improved Condition Generally . and Easier Money Cited as Harbinger of Better Timea. That the local real estate market will be featured by a steady gain' through out the present year, culminating in the Spring of 1915 in a movement strikingly like the strong demand ob served here and elsewhere on the Coast Ave years ago, is the belief of H. O. Peckwith, -Vice-president and general manager of the Fred A. Jacobs Com pany. . . Mr. Beckwith is firmly convinced that the period-of rest which has been pronounced during the past year or so Is at an end, and that Portland and vi cinity may look forward confidently to an Immediate and marked improvement in the realty and building world. - From a National standpoint, Mr. Beckwith believes that the opening of the Alaska steamship line, the passage by Congress of the Alaska railroad bill, and the settlement of the currency question will prove of tremendous value in bringing about a general revival of business: locally, however, he is of the opinion that the announcement of the forthcoming expenditure of l,50(r,000 by the Meier & Frank Company in a big building project was the push nec essary to staKt the ball rolling. "During the past 60 days Portland real estate has been in better demand than fjr any period during the pre- lj l Oregonian Great Distribution of that Superb Song Collection 0 HEART SONGS The Most Famous Songs in the World Four Years in Collecting the Melodies Nearest and Dearest to the Hearts of 20,000 People. 100,000 Copies Sold at $2.50 per Copy Our Offer to Our Readers is for 6 Coupons and Cost of Distribution Many songs pitched in lower key, so the whole family can sing them. Glean Music text, clear print, fine paper, artistic press work. No Other Song Book Can Ever Equal This One It is the last word the climax of song book making Thousands are clamoring for it. Thousands already . have it. Why not YOU? Get it today on your way home and lay up for your family treasures of song for years to come! See Coupon for Terms in Today's Paper on Another Page ' Copyritht by World SrndtraU Co... Inc. vlous 18 months," said Mr. Beckwith. "In this statement, I am 'backed up by all of the older and better established realty firms and subdivision operators in the city. . We And that there is plen ty of money here to buy well built, moderately priced cottages and bunga lows. The report comes to me from other subdivision firms, and I know it is true with the Fred A. Jacobs Com pany, that there is a much better de mand for vacant lots in the suburban district than there has been for a long time. "Another indication of a general im provement is the fact that in all lines of business better collections are re ported. There is no doubt that money Is more plentiful." Grange Opposes 8-Hour Law. ALBANY, Or., March 14. (Special.) Believing that an eight-hour law having application to farms, dairies and other agricultural pursuits would be an injustice, ' the Linn County Pomona Grange has passed a resolution protesting against such a regulation. It is recited that such a law would be wholly Impracticable to the conditions peculiar to farm Industries. . MILL PLANS ARE DRAWN TWO-STORY BRICK STRl'CTl'RE WILL, RISES IX ST. JOHNS. Nev Bnlldlne 1VI1I Be I nit of 75O,00O Plant That Is to Replace Factory Recently Burned. Lewis I. Thompson has drawn plans for the erection of a two-story brick building to be. used by the Portland Woolen Mills'at St. Johns for the hous ing of its scouring and carbonizing de partments. Two weeks ago today, early in the morning, the former scour ing plant was burned. By 7 A. M. the following day, the wires and motors were installed and the second day fol lowing temporary machinery was op erating amidst the ruins of the build ing. Now, a completely new structure will be completed within a month. ThcXnew building, which is to be but a unit of the present $750,000 plant will cover a ground space of 75 by 95 feet and. cost about $7000. A freight elevator, an electric wiring conduit, a new dryer and carbonizer will be in stalled. Contracts have been let for immediate construction. Mr. Thompson is also completing plans for a handsome $3500 country Summer home to be built for Mrs. Jo sephine C. Childs on the Oregon City carline. about 10 miles out of Port land and overlooking the Willamette River. It will be of colonial design. The house will be confined within one story and contain five rooms. Rates Ordered lteduc-cd. ALBANY, Or., March 14 (Special.) Through a provision in the franchise giing the city power to regulate rates, tht City Council has ordered the Ore gon Power Company to reduce the elec tric light rate in this city from II to 7 cents per kilowat hour and the mini mum meter rate per month from $1 to 75 cents. This provision had been for gotten for years, but was unearthed recently. The tiucen bee la.vs 200 eggs a day.