Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 10, 1908)
if G "THE , OREGON SUNDAY -JOURNAL,-PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING. MAY 10. 1003.; iOQD PRICES' rTTv-:.;:.--.-; v.--.o-:iTL- . 1 IE SUSTAINED ;, - : -v-ir' : . y V - ' Cut-Bate Offers Have Xo ' Been Accepted on Realty This Winter. pbofjtSonneably 5 EYEBY SALE XOW Great Activity in Construction of Residences Shows Steady Growth of City in the Many Fine Home District. , The atAdy tona of Portland realty , continues to ba th feature of the Pa cific jnorthweat real estate market Property that was priced at a certain flrur in May lat year, long: before the money stringency was thought of, ll selling in Portland today for the Bsme prices or in many cases for ad vanced flffifrea. A corner on Union avenue that was sold yesterday for $4,000 was placed on the market a year ago at this figure, and repeated offers of lower prices during the year failed to effect a purchase, - The same rule holds good with sub urban realty on both sides of the river, and business property In the down town districts. Suburban property, is stead ily advancing, as Improvements and population warrant, and there Is hardly a man or woman In Portland today who bought property last year and -could not get a profit on it today. - ' Oubarbe Orowlaf Baploly. - This Is a condition of affairs that Is rare over the country at large, and It proves the oft-repeated saying that Portland values are not inflated, but are keot it a reasonable and conserva tive level, despite the continued tempta tion to : boost ' prices to annormai prices to : . aeigtua. ...,. ... ... In all parts of the city permanent Improvements on residence streets and 1a various additions new and old are to be seen. The men who have laid out residence additions are pinning their faith to their properties, and spending money to build them up Into deairabla and valuable home neighbor hoods. On King s Heights many evi dences of improvement are seen, ex tending northward along the Cornell road as far as the head of Kearney street. Willamette Heights is going ahead, and Nob Hill continues to build handsome residences costing from $10, vVO to $25,000. Ssiffiita Xsgloa Booming-. Portland Heights has resumed its last year's building boom, and the move ment is seen away up on Council Crest, where property .has auddenly been brought into the market by the begin ning of construction of the Crest reser voir from which the whole heights dis trict la to secure strong pressure back of the unsatisfactory water supply which the heights has not greatly en. joyed in the past. The recent construc tion of a first class fire engine house and Installation etf a -eompleta fire lighting crew on the heights has given much satisfaction to residents., East Portland from Mllwaltuie to St Johns Is again picking tip its building work, and - the contractors are said to day to have enough work on hand or Jn sight to carry them until after next fall's election. A real estate man said: "I believe from observation among the contractors that they could get along very well on the present work ..-til imrt- .wilnii in cnlta of the pes simists and slow people who are always talking about waiting until after elec ' tion' before undertaking to do anything William Kuyatb, a builder, has pur chased 80 lots in five different blocks In Rose City park and will Immediately begin construction of residences that will be sold on the Installment plan. He wilt- erect dwellings costing from " $2,000 t $$.500. - Kertdeac Oolng Up. Many people who purchased lot this and neighboring additions last yeaf are preparing to build, and a number have commenced construction. Good rich & Goodrich are building a cement Mock bungalow for Robert Withrow. The Butterworth-Stevenson wmpany is erecting a residence on Kenton avenue for U. S. Eckles. of the Portland Gas eompsny. , Clauson & Icia uaon have planned a two-story residence for Mrs. Kate Jones, to be built on Cully sve nue, and work will be commence d next week. A residence for a W. Eastman la being built on Wauna avenue by the Multnomah Mill & dumber com pany. F. A. Schneuer has purchased five lots on Cully avenue and will erect a $S,600 residence Immediately. The handsome country home of Fred W, Brooker, superintendent of the Port land Country club, Is nearly completed end will bv cost 46,000 to l.00O. is a two story, old fashioned struc ture, with wide rambling porches, adapted from the) southern style It is located on flva lots, fronting on the Alameda. . Permanent Improvements. A large amount oMgrading and side walk building has been ordered in ' Rose City -park. Bellecrest and Wtberg Hefghts. Joint contracts 'Sf or grading snd sidewalks have been m ignea by th Portland Trust company, the Rose City Park eaeoclation and the Davis Invest, ment company, owners of V Iberg helrhts. for the improvement of Han cock street east from the Sandy road e. distance of 10 blocks. A contract for grading In Wiberg Heights has bn let to Manning. Wilkins & Smith ii.mx. luniiv will be improved at once from the carline north to Fremont etreet, unaer joini rammvi .B.. Bellecrest by the Jacobs-Stine company and by the Rose City Park association. A contract baa been let for clearing all the streets in the last named ad dition, and grading will immediate y follow. Two gangs of cement sidewalk workers are now laying sidewalks at --the -fa-:-faoof et-a da- :r. -r It Is reported thst the city will im mediately turn the Sandy road into a city street from East Twenty-eighth New lloma of IL B. " l -r, mi,,,,,,.;,,,,,.,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,.!., I.,, i i I Jinn H ,11 , m,, y ,.y,. I , ' ' " A--' -V ( ; ' r -- 1 - ;i . I. - j. -ill ivdS l:mr"rpfi . ' . ....... .y rv h ts.r.W.... a... 1 .. . . . .. jjv ' -: Tx !- rr.vJ - "' " - .... . fc.-.irtifjii F ' i i rr, -w.... .. . ''Mi-" .. - .mi. j .... ... .. " 1 1 iii Residence of Dr. O. ARE NECESSARV Property-Owners Eecognize That More Aceommoda tions.Are Needed. The rumor of one, of even more, new ; first class hotels for Portland in the near future will not be downed. The demand has existed for a long time, and with the rapid growth of the city the , demand has now become lnsistsnt. Last summer the first class hotels here could not take care of over 80 per cent of the people who came to them. Rates for rooma advanced from $1 to $1.60 for single rooms on the European plan, still the demand kept up. At one time last summer every hotel in the city was full at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, with a waiting list of over 60 In one of them, and metr sat In the corridors as late its llaclock before they could get a roomrhls was not an exceptional case, either, for the con dition existed more or less intense for some weeks during the period of heavy travel. The fact that it was known that first diss hotel accommodations were" 'limited In -Portland kept travel away from this city last year, and many who came and' could not get rooms were compelled to go on either to Seattle or to Ban Francisco. , As things stand today in this city the hotels even at this -season of the year never average less than 90 per cent of their rooms full. At least 600 rooms could be filled easily if another hotel of the better grade was here to take care of the demand. Hob Hill Hotel. Last week a deal was closed by C. K. Henry whereby the entire block bound by Davis, Couchi Seventeenth and Eight eenth streets, changed hands. Whether this is to be used for a new hotel to cover the entire block cannot now be ascertained. Inside rumors also point to' the plot of ground on the corner of Fourth and Alder streets as a site for a new hotel. This piece of -ground Is to be covered by a modern building this summer, to be erected by the Hotel In vestment company.. The block on Fifth street in. Surveyors are at work estab lishing the- grades. -There is a fair prospect for a new street railway line on this road as soon as grades are fixed. Residence of P. A. mORE HOTELS iftt; part )- iU. . 3a3fl- , k; xi.fl v " 'r k - -ift r.rt.f Irn-wrf inVf-fr-f" --- -------y - ..y.. ,.,t.m Rice, East. Eighteenth and Clackamas Streets T. Trommald, East Tenth and Multnomah Streets. -iff liHx. 7 -X A Ar ;itn.ii it 11". l "! " ' F t t l s s 8 t" jrrm Nearly Completed Residence of P. A. Carlander, East Seventeenth and Halsey Street. and Stark, owned by Gay Lombard, will be covered by a hotel building. The new Cornelius hotel will open May IE, under the management of H. K. Clark, recently head clerk of the Portland. This will add 160 rooms to Portland's hotel accommodations, but thst is only a drop in the bucket. The Hotel Lenox has C. N. Bennett for its new manager, who for two years was manager of the Mltchel hotel in Everett, Washington. Tull & GlbbB now control the Lenox, having taken control April 21. With the traveling public having to wait from 10 to 16 hours for a hotel room, and then often rorced to go at midnight to some cheaper rooming house, and having to wait for five roomingn days to get even an upper berth In a sleeping car out of the city in any di rection. It Is high time this city had more railroad trains and at least 26 to 60 per cent more hotel room than It bas at present. Carlander, East Seventeenth and Halsey Streets. ...fi yr------ FOUR DEALS IN ONE WEEK BY ONE FIRM The following sales of real estate were made this week through the Neal Brown Heal Estate company: M. J. "Con well, of Forest Grove", to 1P. R. Dickison, of Portland. 68 V, acres tme mile from Dllley, Washington oOunty, Oregon; consideration, 14,026. W. R. Dickison to M. J. Conwell, residence at 22 Skidmore street, Port land; consideration, fz.iw. Neal Brown, of Portland, to John Senner, of Portland, 60 acres two miles west or Gaston; consideration, 12,700. aenc9 corner of- East Nineteenth and Oregon streets; consideration, 2,700. Tomorrow, the 11th. positively the last day tor discount on west side gas bins. Remittances must be received before discount period expires. Portland Gas Co. CHICAGO: POLICE STAND BY CHIEF Officers Refuse s to Say Col lins - Ordered Them to - s - Work for; Dunne. ; ' (United Piees Leased Wire.) ' Calcago, May B.-r-Wltnesses for the state having disappointed him -upon the stand in the trial of ex-Chief of Police Collins and 'Attorney Frank 'Comerford on the charge of using their official po sitions for political purposes. State's Attorney Healy announced tonight that he would begin - action at once for per jury against the witnesses. V The wit nesses were policemen, who were ex pected to testify that Collins had in structed them to ignore their beats and help the candidapy of -Dunne for mayor two years agov . Tbo policemen all exonerate their did chief, however. r r . , 1 . Kondav Is the Day To buy ladies' suits. Some of the most wonderful bargains ever offered In this city; what you pay ? 25 for elsewhere will be $14.50 st Le Palais Royal, Mon day. 37S "Washington stidet. ' , PUT UP Ul IG FOR A: Fleshman "Will 'Accom modate Oriental Tenants on N. Fourth Street A-three story brick building 100 feet square to cost $30,000 is to be erected fat once by A. Fleshman' on Fourth street between Flanders and Ollsan streets to rent to Chinese. D. Lysen is named in the building permit just issued as the builder. A. Fleshman, the owner, is a shoe merchant at $47 Morrison street. "The lower floor will be ror cninese stores,' . said a representative of . Mr. Fleshman yesterday. -"The two upper I stories- will be used for a Chinese lodg I lng house, or such other purposes as may develop The building will be among At best or its tuna, d built with': the object or giving i place for the Chinese th hnat claaa. - clean, sanitary Of ' this city of "Thev make arood tenants, ana are an Important part of the business life of this city, especially , in regard io our growing trade with China, tm time i haii rone by. both for the. good of the Chinese themselves and the health of the- city in general, ror tne cninese to he crowded Into dark, old tumble-down rookeries, - such as many of them now occupy. I propose to provide a com' para lively y first class place' for them ; ' ftaSrWnaftsV.sVa'IIMftgl HMftll&Attmi that is, for the better class. The Chi nese are rapidly going down to the lo cality where I am going- to begin to put up this building as soon as we can get under way. ' RESIDENCE LOTS I Speculative Feature Absent Most Elaborate Concrete House in City. The many nsw homes being built in Highland and Lincoln Park annex. well as greatly , Increased school at tendance at the 'Highland school, are Indicative of growth In tha northeast corner of Portland,, ionproved streets and opening of new ones throws on the realty market new tracts of land for homes, and active buying has resulted. These tracts, like many . others In Portland, hay been all sold out by the original owners, those who subdivided tne property ana put it on the market Transfers in these sections are be tween individual buyer and seller, and In most cases a sale results In the building of one or more homes. Sunnyside is another example of this activity that' is noted Dy smaller deal ers who have - not the selling of one addition more in mind than another, The speculative feature Is largely ab sent in such transactions, although property In such localities is sure of ncrease. r f '; Among dwellings neartng comoletion in Piedmont, the cement block house being built by Messrs. Parrlsh and Thompson is more pretentious than any yet constructed in Portland, having an elaborate portico of broad dimensions, Including1 columns of cement, one piece from floor to celling. These columns are the largest single pieces noted in local cement construction. "A EXPERIMENT STATION HESULTS IN KLAMATH (Special Pispatcb to The JgssaaL) ' Klamath -Falls,- Or, May - The grains, grasses and trees planted by the government as an experiment are doing well. The cool weather has retarded the growth somewhat, but W. H. Heile man of the reclamation service, who is In charfce of all experimental work, is well satisfied with the resulta He ex pects to experiment later with a hardy rass mat win oe sown on tne canal anks. This will add greatly to the beauty of the country as well as keep tne nanas in Detter conaition, . GRANT'S PASS PUTS ON THE SPEED LIMIT - - . (SpeeUd Dlspateb to The' Joonud.) Grants Pass, Or, May t.Th city council has passed an ordinance limit ing tha speed of motorcars to It miles per hour within "the city limits. Other restrictions are also placed upon driv ers, such as keeping to the right. slowV ing aown to six miles an hour at-corners and stopping when passing fright ened teams. Violators of the ordinance win oe punished? by a fine of from $20 to $100, or a Jail sentence of from five i 4"v oays, or oom. l - . ' L. WHITE, Ohlmf mt Stmtf "GENTIE DENTISTRY" Mt WUflMgTOT It, Ml. Ilfr SROIt Rail I7SI kaMkuuTrwtaidf. otw MSare-alr &Lm lur CHANGING HANDS It 11 RINTDM ii ,) Is the ch6fcest addition within the four-mile circle; and the1 fi mot reasonablfc in price of M The building activity in this tnanever. oetore. . , , If you buy for a home you know you will never have heavy street imprpvements ; you are close tos streetcars and in ' a section of the city where good homes are being built , If you buy for an investment, the indications seem to show that a greater proportionate return on your' money will be made in this locality than in any other, . Lots are now selling at from $175 to $300 each, on easy terms. Investigate this property and judge for yourself. Take W. W.' car at Third and Yamhill, get off at Woodstock Station ; the property lies east the sign points the way. II ii I ii AGENT ALWAYS ON THE GROUND. n M H II II II M M CIOORE INVESTMENT COMPANY 3 313 Washington Street. TN ii : iii Donald is situated on the Oregon- Electrio Railway," half way be tween Portland and Salem. On account of the fine fruit district sur rounding the townslte it is bound to make the best town on the Una. It is the Intention of the company to sen these lots, as they want a hundred different people Interested in this townslte. B1AUT1TU1 tOT XST Tuesday,Mayl2, 1 908 v . TBBKSt OITB EiLT CASH I OWB UU OHX TBAJL I ONE LOT GIVEN AWM When the sals-begins at ft o'clock noon, every person on the ground win De preseniea wun a iicaei, chance on one or the best lots on ciose ox tne sate witnoui pnoa EXCURSION A rate of one and one third fare has been secured from all points between Portland and Salem to Donald for this day. Train leaves Salem 9:05 a. m., returning leaves Donald 3:21 p. m. . Round trip, 06c, . Train leaves Portland S:iB a. m., returning leaves' Donald 4:11 p. m. Round trip, tl.OS. - ...... ... . .. uvszo mr iaxxis htutabt baits itbjsh r.xnrcK oir oboubbs AT wooir. . . The Donald Townsite and Land Co. ' B. J- X. OrLBTJUT, Auetioasm. T. If. DBXBT, Manager, Salem, Or. Terlliir The Scenic Addition of South Portland One Hundred Fifty Lots in this Tract tfovr offered for sale at prices ranging from $400 UP Served by three electric carlines, eight to ten minutes' ride from the business center; walking distance. : - This Is Your Opportunity To proctfre a homesite or an investmet on the West Side, right in the city, with fine view of snow-capped mountains, East Portland nd Willamette River. Lots 50x100. Streets 60 and 80 feet wide. TERMS $100 Down, balance monthly or quarterjy payments; interest 6 per cent. GO OUT TODAY and look them over. Take any south-bound car on Second or Third street, get off on Corbett, between Seymour and Richardson avenue. Salesman on the ground -to show property. For further particulars inquire of J. C. COSTELLO Phone Main S177. Yet, OPPbRTlWlTY is Chocking at IT IS A CHANCE TO MAKE MONEY - An Acre for the Price of a Lot Midland Acre AT LENTS Title Guarantee C& Trust Co. also Oregon Saving: , C& Trust Co. accounts taken in payment . - IT PAYS TO SEE US v CHAPIN Q, HER.LOW 332 Chamber of Commerce. Phone Main 1652 w I 44 any other property so situated. part of the city is greater today . Phone at Office, Sellwood 1234. AUCTION SALE OF TOWNSITE I WILL BS SOLS BZSDia OS TO B30K- wnion win entitle tne noiaer to the sue, to be given away at the 331 Chamber of Commerce. Tracts Homestead -w i t