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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1922)
THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JUNE 18, 1922 0 BUSINESS BUILDINGS CONTINUE TO RISE WITH PROSPECTS FOR RECORD BUILDING YEAR DEMAND FOR HOUSES IN CITY GOOD. LOCAL REALTY III Work," Jessie D. McCorab, homo demonstration leader; Monday, July 24, "Boys' and Girls' Club Work," H. C. Seymour, state club leader; Tues day. July 25, "The Specialist's Con tribution to the Programme of Work," to be given by some agri cultural specialist, who will be des ignated by the director, choice of specialist being made so as not to interfere with existing schedule; Wednesday, July 26, "The Extension A FOB STORE SPACE Renewed Activity Reported Drive for 1923 Convention to Be Inaugurated. Programme in Rural Life, Florence E. Ward, states relations service, Washington, D. C; Thursday. July 27, "Extension Methods in Organiza tion." Miss Ward; Friday, July 28, "The Home Demonstration Agent, Her Qualifications andi Service," Miss Ward. by B. L Metzger. X NEW BUILDING TO RISE MARCHES ARE PLANNED 1 I STATE COSTS DISTORTED WORLD'S ALMANAC FIGURES INCORRECT. One-Story and Basement Struc Portlanders Preparing to Make Demonstration in Streets of Vancouver, B. C. ture to Be Krected at Corner of Grand Avenue and Oak. 10 II mm BIO DELEGATION fi '-r r ' '--" ,y The last week has been signifi cant for a renewed activity in the demand tor store space, according to announcement of B. L. Metzger nf ha firm nt TLTut 7.1? Pr-Park fif COB1- ipany. Mr. Metzger said that this J was more evident because of a de gression which existed for a time previous. ! Mr. Metzeer announced that ne gotiations had been closed for the erection of a one-story and base ment building on the southeast cor ner of Grand avenue and East Oak street for William P. Woodward and Louis G. Clark of the firm of Woodard & Clark. The building will be constructed of concrete and will contain a showroom 50x40 feet. . It will be so constructed as to care for used cars on, the main floor, with provisions for a shop in the base ment. The building will cost in excess of J20.000. Plans for the building have been prepared by Houghtaling & Dougan. Building Is Leased. The building has been leased by Condit & Conser, who have the east side agency for the Durant and Star cars. The Dayton Scale company has leased the corner of Ninth and Burnside streets, located in the new four-story building recently erected at that location. The space taken is about 2500 feet and includes the basement and first floor. The lease is for a five-year period. Herman C. Kriess, who has been conducting a high-class fur store in San Francisco for a number of years, has leased approximately 1000 feet on the second floor, cor ner . of the two-story building on the northwest corner of Park and Yamhill streets. Mr. Kriess expects to ftt up the premises in a high class manner and will operate a modern fur store. He Is well acT quainted with the Portland trade, having been associated here for a number of years in the fur busi ness. Charles Ringler assisted Mr. Metzger In negotiating this lease. The lease is for a two-year period. 1450 Square Feet Leased. A. Dimitry has leased approxi mately 1400 square feet in the two- story and basement building located at Fourth and Couch streets for use as a restaurant and soft-drink es tablishment. The property has a pressed brick exterior and is owned by O. B. Stubbs. Storeroom at 80 West Park street ias been leased to the Austin Music ompany, dealers in wholesale music, for a five-year period. Mr. ustin .operates stores in several ities in the northwest, and in com- ng to Portland he is roundinir ont his chain. The one-story building erected for O. E. Stubbs at the corner of Fourth and Everett streets has been completed, and is completely occu- mea with the exception of one store. This building has six storerooms acing on Fourth and three on Everett street, as well as a large hall situated In the rear of the building, it is finished in white concrete and is a great improvement upon the shacks which recently oc cupied the property. This building was built as a result of the city's attempt to remove old fire hazards. HOTEL GOODWIX IS OPENED Ex-Stockman Declares Confidence In, Success of Project. The new Hotel Goodwin on Park street, between Stark and Oak streets, in what was formerly the Oregon hotel annex, was formallv opened to the public Thursday. The Duuaingp has Just been renovated. oesiaea i rooms, tnere are a num. oer or spacious sample rooms. me hotel will be under the tier sonal management of M. L. Good win, who formerly managed the K.ing-iliu and Cecelia apartments. Mr. Goodwin was formerly engaged in stock business in eastern Oregon, wnere ne nas a large circle of friends. J. W. Bushong. a well- known hotel man of Portland, is the head clerk. 'I am thoroughly convinced that hotel centrally situated and con ducted in an atmosphere of refine ment, with popular prices in effect, is sure to meet with success in Portland." said Mr. Goodwin. "The future of Portland looks good to me, and this new hotel is my way of expressing my confidence." ROSEBUKG HAS GREAT BOOM $125,000 Apartment and Many Homes Under Construction. BOSBBURG, Or., June 17. (Spe cial.) This city is now experiencing one of the greatest building booms in Its history. Though a large num ber of new homes have been built since the first of the year, there is still a decided lack of living quar ters. ' This condition is being re lieved by the construction of a mod ern apartment house, which is be ing erected by George Kohlhagen, a local merchant and cattleman, at an estimated cost of J125.00O. In addition there are more than a dozen residences under construction the total cost of which will be more than $50,000. A 525,00 garage and lodge hall combined is under con struction and a $10,000 service sta tion has just been completed and ?ieed for business. In addition 4Any smaller buildings are go ing up. GARAGE BUILDING STARTED Six-Story Structure Going Up at " Broadway and Taylor Street. Work has started on erection of a six-story garage building on the ruins of the old Meier & Frank com pany's warehouse at Broadway and Taylor street. Plans for th& build ing have been prepared by Sutton & Whitney. The first floor of the structure will have facilities for stores and the remainder of the building will be devoted to garage and aatomo- bile storage purposes. The construction work will cost in the neighborhood of $60,000, ac cording to announcement of Leon Hlrsch, secretary of the Meier & Frank company. The warehouse at that location was burned over a year. ago. - I " ' A 1 . wji Above at left Tievr 9 25,000 movlngr-plctnre corner of Grand avenue and Bast streets sold by Cleland & Hubbell East Forty-first street North, sold T LEI M. HOCKE3V GETS JOB FOR FILM CORPORATION. Premium Production Company to Erect $25,000 Structure Near Beaverton. The Premium Production ' com pany, Inc., last week awarded the contract for erection of a $25,000 motion picture studio on the .Con cannon estate in the western limits of Beaverton to A. M. Hocken. The company is composed of Portland promoters and capitalists, headed by John J. Fleming, presi dent, and Dr. G. E. Watts, secretary- treasurer, and assisted by Dr. Earl C. Smith and Mrs. E. C. Smith as incorporators. The corporation has another studio located at Bisbee, Ariz. The Beaverton studio will be a beauti ful structure erected under the supervision of Earl G. Cash, archi tect. The main building will be 90 by 100 feet .in size, with double stage and executive offices. Fourteen . acres of ground have been reserved for the studio. Nine teen acres adjoining will be plat ted and placed on the market as Premium addition to Beaverton. Smith-Wagoner company of Portland and C. H. Fry of Beaverton will handle the sale of this property. Otto Erickson, mayor of Beaver ton, headed a campaign which re sulted in the raising of more than $4000 to assist in ereating the studio. It was announced that the new enterprise will mean a pay roll of 75 men, besides troupes en gaged in making films. Work on the building will be started immediately. COMMUNITY HOUSE PLANNED Plans for Church Structure to ;, Be Settled Soon. . Definite plans for the erection of the new community house at Thirty fifth and East Tamhill streets, ad joining the Sunnyside Methodist Episcopal church, will be settled upon by the first or next week. Roy Ellison, chairman of the com mittee which has been working out the arrangements for the construc tion of the building, is expected to return from a trip through the east this week and will call a meet ing of the general committee mpon his return. Liberal aid for the building project has been received from the residents of the commun ity, and the three-tory building is now practically assured. Locating the new structure on Yamhill street near the church will necessitate the moving of the old parsonage, and it is understood that new parsonage will be built also. The plans and subscriptions for the new parsonage are toeing handled by the Ladies Aid society. The new community building wthen completed will be three stories high and will provide a gymnasium and swimming in addition to the clubrooms, ac cording to the specifications. BEAUTIFUL HOME TO. RISE Leon " Hirsch Residence Will Be of Old English Type. Among the beautiful residences to rise on Portland Heights this summer will be that of Leon Hirsch secretary of the Meier & Frank company. The home is to be erected on a large site extending from Montgomery drive to Twenty-second street . drive . and lying between Jackson street and Carter lane. Plans for the building have been prepared by Sutton & Whitney, providing for a residence. of the old English type. ' The interior will be worked out elaborately and will be modern. COLUMBARIUM GOING CP $50,000 Structure Rising oil Cre matorium Grounds; One of the most richly finished columbariums in America ; will be erected immediately on the grounds of the Portland crematorium, East Fourteenth and Bybee streets. When completed it will represent an expenditure of between $45,000 and $50,000 and will be one of the models of its kind for this character of structure. Work on the first two units of the building began "last week. The columbarium is being built atndlo to be erected for Predlnm Production company, In., at Beavenon. Above at rigTBt Garase coatine 2O,000 to be put up at southeast Oak street for occupancy of Condlm & Conser. Below at left Eight-room colonial house at outhweat corner of Floral avenne and East lian to E. A. Clark, general manager of the King's Food Products company, for $12,000. Below at right Ten-room bungalow on corner site at 86 by Hazel Talbot to Joseph O. Baar of Baar & Cunningham, for 13,000. Both residence sales were negotiated by R. H. Torrcy. to the south of the present build ings and will be connected directly with them by hallways. The build ing will be two stories in height and of reinforced concrete con struction. There wjll be six large niche rooms, and in addition a number of individual cluster niches. Each niche will be fronted by plate glass and heavy bronze finishings and they will be illuminated from the rear through heavy amber-colored art glass windows. The interior finish will be in cast stone, and soft-toned tiles. The building was designed by Lawrence & Holford, architects. James Quinn is in charge of the construction work. STORE, ROOM TRANSFERRED Damascus Deal Involves $39,650 in Cash and Property. The J. C. Elliott general store and home at Damascus was transferred last week to P. S. Mudge of 691 Hancock street, Portland. The prop erty and cash involved in the trans action amounted to $39,650. Albert Wolfhagen, with Frank C. Robin son, Portland realtor, negotiated the deal. The Damascus store will be en larged by its new owner and sev eral new lines of merchandise added. making it a complete modern rural department store. Mr. Elliot, who has taken over the Mudge home in Irvington, has been a resident of Damascus for 34 years and established his business there in 1896. Mr. Elliot is a radio enthusiast and operates with C. Vincent, local electrical engineer, the Damascus radio station. Trade With Poland Increasing. WARSAW, The Polish chamber of commerce declares that trade be tween Poland and the United States is Increasing rapidly. In spite of low rates of exchange, Polish-Amer ican imports and exports in 1921 were nearly three times those of 1920, In the first two quarters of 1921, Poland imported 345,000 tons of American goods, against 124,000 tons in the same period of 1920. Exports for the first two quarters of 1921 were 776 tons, as compared to 210 in 1920. Poland's total export traae m iszi also more than trebled increasing from 620,000 tons in 1920 to 2,000,000 tons in 1921. In 1920 Polish exports were only 17 per cent of the imports; in 1921 they were 43 per cent. MANY BUNGALOWS GO UP IN PA-4" T?!I4l'igg'-y':'' ' '- - - - - - Above Beautiful bungalow just completed at 71 East Thirty-fifth street, in L,anrelhnrst, for 1.. B. Symmonds. Below New home of Mrs. C. A. Walker, 1392 Hancock street. The residence shown above is one of the most complete electrically equipped homes in the city. It was erected by Will T. Taylor. . There Is a corner fireplace of Swiss design. of Laurelhurst park. Mr. Symmonds company, with offices In the Artisans' building. The bungalow shown below is one of many which have recently been erected in the Rose City Park district. It has five rooms and cost in the neighborhood of $7000. , . PARKRDSE TRACTS SOLD MANY OF NEW PURCHASERS BEGIN TO BUILD. 133 Lots in Rose City Park and 143 in Beaumont Placed on Market by Realtors. The tract of home sites recently opened in Parkrose, including the last unit of land held by the Park- rose association, is rat) idly being sold, according to J. L. Hartman company. All purchasers so far have either Btarted building or in tend to build soon. The property is located a mile east of the city limits on Sandy boule vard. Many sites have streams of spring water and practically all have shade trees. Work is now under way on the construction of roads and 'bridges in the district. Messrs. Hickman and Wilson, managers of the realty de partment of J. L. Hartman company. have opened a branch office at the end of the Parkrose carline on Sandy boulevard for the handling 1 of the sale of these acres. The same company has been placed in charge of 143 lots In Beau mont, many of them view lots,, and 133 Rose City Park lots. These in clude the last of the Rose City Park association holdings and in addition 61 Scattered lots in Hyde Park. A quick sale of the property is antici pated, and with this in view a snappy campaign is to be put on. An office to handle this property is being established at East Forty fifth street and Sandy boulevard. CHURCH BEING IMPROVED Basement Being Excavated for Kitchen and Class Rooms.' Extensive improvements in the Lincoln Methodist Episcopal church, East Fifty-second and Lincoln streets, are being made and more than $8000 will be expended in ren ovating the building, according to the present plans. A basement under the entire church is being excavated, and this when completed will pro vide a kitchen, dining room and two class rooms' for the Sunday school classes. The basement will be 45 by 50 feet and two of the rooms will have fireplaces. An addition to the main church VARIOUS SECTIONS OF" CITY. The residence has a beautiful view is connected with Coe A. McKenna wirig about 24x50 feet is also under construction and is expected to be ready for use by September. The wing Is so constructed that it can be thrown open as a part of the main auditorium when needed and provides a tower room and a study. The improvements iu the building will provide room for about 300 Sunday school pupils, the average attendance now being about 135. The church has enjoyed a rapid growth in the past year and a half, more than doubling its member ship and making the additions nec essary to accommodate its increased enrollment. Another Sea Baby Born to Uncle Sam. Leo Island, Hating 10,800 Square Feeti Annexed. ONOLULU, T. H-, June 17. (By the Associated Press.) The United States, apparently, is ap proximately 10,800 square feet larger today than it was a week or so ago. The lew acquisition is named Leo island, named and claimed for the Union by Lorrin A. Thurston, at torney and publisher, prominent in the affairs of this territory. This was Thurston s second venture in the annexation business, his first having been on a somewhat larger scale, when he was active in bring ing Hawaii under the wings of the American eagle. According to Mr. Thurston, who undertook the role of "official an nexationer" for a Honolulu fishing company which needs a safe harbor in that marine region, Leo island lies in longitude 16- degrees 18 minutes west, and latitude 6 de grees 23 minutes north; it measures 90 feet wide by 120 feet long and five to six feet thick at high water; is formed entirely of coral; has no vegetation; presented no evidence of previous occupancy, barring the skeletons of a couple of defunct sea gulls; and has' been known indef initely for years as Kingman's reef, with no apparent reason for its des ignation and no trace of any foreign claim to ownership. Following his annexation cere mony, which included hoisting the stars and stripes, Thurston for warded all the legal documents in the case to Washington and is awaiting official recognition of the birth of Uncle Sam's latest sea baby. PENS TO BE ENLARGED Capacity of State Game Farm Is to Be Doubled. EUGENE, Or., June 17. (Special.) The state game farm at Eugene will be doubled in capacity this year, according' to Louis E. Bean of this city, the newly appointed mem mer of the state game commission. The improvements contemplated by the commission, said Mr. Bean, will enable the pens to accommo date 5000 to 7000 pheasants. The cost of the "improvement will be about $5600 and belief Is that it will greatly increase bird produc tion. Manager Simpson will make the improvements at once. The pens at the state game farm nbw cover about 1280 by 224 feet and their size will be doubled. There are between 3500 and 4000 birds at the farm. Plans are to keep from 5000 to 7000 through the winter and liberate them in the spring. It costs about $2 each to produce the pheasants and the commission con siders it poor policy to liberate them in the fall to be shot during hunting season, while they are yet young. Poland Compels Education. W A R S A W, r The introduction of general compulsory education throughout Poland will be completed by the end of 1928, according to the programme of the ministry of edu cation. The new measure obliges every child of seven years to enter and attend school for seven years, and already is in operation, but shortage of teachers and school buildings- makes its general appli cation slow. Warsaw alone must find school premises for 40,000 ex tra children to put the law into full effect.- Eleven new school buildings are now being erected in this city. France Buys Canadian Organ. ST. HY AC! NTHE, Quebec One of the most interesting export orders received by a Canadian manufac turer was recently booked by Casa vant Freres, Limited, of this city. It was for an organ to be installed in Paris,, France, next September, and is important in that it is the first instrument of th kind to be shipped from this continent to Eu rope. The organ has three manuals, 40 stops and over 3000 pipes. " " E SITES TO BE PENINSULA LOTS TO BE PUT ' ON MARKET. Property Short Distance From Schools and Has Many Attract ive Features. A deal has just been closed by Frank L. McGuire with the mort gagees of a large holding company on the Peninsula for the liquidation of the assets, which include about 1000 home ites in the Peninsula district. By the terms of the selling agreement Mr. McGuire is enabled to offer lots 50x100 feet in size at unusually low prices on payments of a few dollars down and a few dollars a month. The sites lie n various parts of the district, some being cleared and in cultivation and some containing fir trees and native shrubbery. The property - has excellent street-car service, yet is within walking dis tance of the Peninsula industrial district. Gas and water mains al ready are in and electric lights have been installed. A large number of the lots are on paved streets. The property is but a short dis tance from high school, grammar school and branch library. . Pier park of 40 acres, which is to be developed by the city, also i in the iBrmediate district. Seldom does the home builder havj such opportunity to buy a lot with so many attractive features as here offered," said Mr. McGuire. "All these sites are admirably situated and with many improvements al ready installed I consider them the best values on the market. In reality the lots to be sold are priced at about one-third of their former value. With the big demand for home sites I fully expect to sell a big percentage 'of them within the next few months." A large number of modern and attractive homes have been built throughout the district during the last two years. MURRAYMEAD LOTS SELLING Agents Report Good Demand .rid Residences Going Up. About 30 homesites, consisting of those remaining unsold in Murray, mead, east of Ladd's addition, were placed on the market last week by Ritter, Lowe & Co. It was an nounced that about a dozen Si them already have been taken and a good demand is indicated by inquiries. The property is bounded on the north by Harrison street, south by Division street, west by East Twenty-fourth street and east by East Twenty-sixth street. It was originally platted by Judge Ganten bein. A number of houses are being erected in the district and others are to go up in the near future. Why Should You Build With Brick? HERE IS THE ANSWER: There is no other building material which so well combines PERMA NENCE with ARTISTIC BEAUTY. Specify Standard BRICK & TILE CO. REAL BURNED CLAY BRICK With a view to bringing the 1923 convention of the Northwest Real Estate association to Portland, ef forts will be made to send a record delegation of real estate men from this city to the convention of that association at Vancouver, B. C, July 19 to 22. 1 A campaign to arouse interest in the coming convention at Vancouver has already been inaugurated by A. R. Ritter. president of the Port land board, and it is hoped to send at least a hundred Portlanders to the meeting. The larger portion of the Portland delegation Is expected to make the trip by automobile, and upon the arrival of the Portlanders ft is the intention to march through the city. headed by a band to let the Vancou ver residents know that the Rose City -delegates are there. , Up-State Realtor Invited. The Portlanders will make the trip north in a body and arrange ments will be made for especial ac commodations on the way. It is ex pected to have other Oregon realtor Join the Portland delegation here for the trip north in a body. The northwest association has about 2000 members in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, British Columbia and Alberta, and advices from convention headquarters are that automobile caravans are to be made up in all sections of the terri tory for the trip to Vancouver. Present indications are, it was de olared, that the convention wili be the best attended in the history of the association. The scenic highways of British Columbia offer a lure for outing trips, and many of the realtors are planning on automobile trips through that province following the convention. , Taxes to Be Discussed. Many questions of interest to real estate men will come up for con sideration. These will include taxa tion and reclamation of desert and logged off land. Problems relating to the conduct of a general real es tate business will also come up in conferences. It was announced from convention headquarters that delegates wishing to make hotel reservations in ad vance should address H. R. Fuller ton, chairman of the convention hotel committee, suite 21, E53 Gran ville street, Vancouver, B. C. UNIQUE PROTESTS MADE California Industrial Welfare Commission Faces Criticism. . SAN FRANCISCO, June 17. The complaint that the "common hazards of life, including matrimony," were not included by the industrial wel fare commission in its recent reduc tion of the minimum wage for women in California, from $16 a week to $15, is considered by the commisaion as the most unusual ob jection made to its action. The commission declined to reveal the source of this complaint, but said it was not an isolated instance, because from another source (a male one) exception was taken to the commission's apparent power to re strict a "matrimonial inclination." Said the second complaint: "We feel that to be just we should ask ourselves the following question: flf I happen to be born a female with the same (I believe intelligent) brain that I am endowed with, but owing to circumstances am com pelled to toil for a meager wage of $16 a week, what would my thought be If intelligent, educated men who, owing to the law, have the power to retard my health, my strength, my education, my matrimonial inj clination, religious thought, clean liness and pleasure, and reduce my minimum wage of $16 a week?" LECTURES ARE ARRANGED Special Course on Extension Work to Be Given at Corvallis. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE. Corvallis, June 17. (Special.) A two-weeks' course of lectures on extension work will be given in connection with the summer session here, July 17 to 29. The programme of lectures follows: Monday, July. 17, "Organization and Function of the Extension Serv ice," Director Paul V. Maris; Tues day, July 18, "Relationships," Di rector Maris; Wednesday, July 19, "Programme of Work," W. L. Kad derly, assistant county agent leader; Thursday, July 20, "County Ag-nt Work," by Mr. Kadderly; Friday, July 21, "Home Demonstration BOOK OF PLANS FREE Author of Misinformation Regard ing Washington's Expenses Not Yet Identified. , BY SAM L. CRAWFORD. OLYMPIA. Wash.. June 17. (Spe caiL) Grave injustice has been done the state of Washington and the present state administration through broad circulation, both by publication and by quotation from the public platform of gross misin formation contained in the "World's Almanac" for the current year, wherein are quoted ' figures -which on their face show that in cost of state government Washington ranks fourth among the states of the union, L. D. McArdle, director of the state department of effi ciency, said today. For several weeks Director Mc Ardle has been attempting to learn the source of the misinformation ; which reached the "World's Alma nac" and which the editors of that publication were led to believe- came from an accredited official source. In this he has been unsuccessful, every state office from which the figures could have emanated having in turn denied its authorship. At tempts even to trace the typewrit ing on the original questionnaire, which was returned to Director Mc Ardle by the "World's Almanac" ed itors, have been without avail. It has been foun that the fisrures nnntAri Bs ioptnlaHvA armrnnriAtlnngt for one year were, in reality, the total appropriations made by the 1921 legislature for the 1921-23 bi- ennlum, with something more than $1,200,000 added for good measure. The "World's Almanac figures chow appropriations for the year 1921 as $59,462,826.90, whereas the biennial appropriations of the 1921 legislature actually totaled $58, 258,364.22. To give a correct state ment of 1921 appropriations, Direc tor McArdle's statement shows, half of the correct biennial total, or $29, 129,182.11, should have been taken. Had these figures been quoted, Washington would have been shown so far down in the scale of states in order of governmental cost that' no comment would have been ex cited. Fern Tree Found in Mine. CALGARY. Alta. From the depths of a coal mine at Wayne, Alberta, a section of petrified fern tree, 20 feet in length, was excavated. It lay in a bed of clay between two strata of coal, the upper of whicli was 2000 years younger than the lower. The specimen is new proof, if this were needed, that central Alberta was once a sub-tropical country. The Wayne mine is close to the bed of the Red Deer river, along which the dinosaurs and other monsters used to roam millions of years ago. WE WILL GLADLY feUOTE A FIGURE - ON THE WORK F0R; WHICH You're EAGER!. OS 3J FOR some time you've been thi nking about the plumbing which you have needed and you've made an effort to figure out its prob able cost. Now that's not the right way to go about it at all. Ask us to figure out what our charge will be and then you'll order the job done. ALASKA PLUMBING & HEATING CO. 363 EAST MORRISON ST. East 2954 Armstrong's Linoleum and Cork Tiling Use It Wherever There's a Floor Inexpensive to Install Long-Lived Cleanly Ours Is the Largest Stock on the Pacific Coast CORK FLOOR PRODUCTS COMPANY Broadway at Taylor ! ' FURNACE We have the Richardson-Boyn. ton Furnaces both the pipeless and the regular kind. We are experts on heating and ventilat ing. We will give you the benefit of our forty years' experience in this line. It will save you future trouble and expense by installing the right furnace in the right way. J.C.Bayer Furnace , Company 204 MARKET ST.