Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 12, 1908)
" V " .... I , . t 8 . THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 12. 1908. GROUP OF HANDSOME EAST SIDE DWELLINGS RECENTLY COMPLETED (I. It Oil TO 3t B . -r,-,-,, ; - -r-nirrna l " 1 t ty , ,v iar r"r' r - " v- , - , " 1 I h ' i. -iV' , ' PA. ..I- y.-.JL.i.: i--l .wx y . - yMMMMMMIII,l . Where Indians Sat Now Fine v;; . ' hIi DL:7 r" ' ; ; Homes House City's View-Lovers i -r vVirs;i WCfv rvk ifL r ;;V-i One of the things that most Impresses visitor to the Rose City Is the pretty ' ! names given to places, streets, sub divisions and additions, but probafcly J none hold the attention longer or at- tract more genuine Interest than the name "Council Crest park." ; When one hears this name for the first time his first expression is "What 'a pretty name!" and then "Where did ;you pebple get such an attractive name for the most delightful spot on earth?" Wall, there has been no research to find the name; just nanaed flown irom i-ne 'Indians. In the long, long ago when i William CuHen Bryant wrote his Thanatopsis" and said "Go, loose thy- self In the continuous wood where roils ithe Oregon, yet the dead are there and ; millions in thai solitude." " Yes, Bryant was riirht, for Council i Crest was known by that name before the Hudnon Bay company started in ,'fcuslness In Astoria, and probably back i centuries before that date. When evn iglorious Mount Hood waa .a. hole in the Igrounfl. tne inaians used to go up to . Council Crest to look Into the hole that -Mount Hood grew up out of, and there Is no keener connoisseur of nature than Mr. Redman. It was where their chiefs met to hold their councils and from whence came the now hlstorio name Council Crest. This place continued in the history of the red man down to the time of Chief Multnomah and since the passing -of the red man . from our midst there came the dark age for Council Crest,,, when by the process of civilization its ., great scenic grandeur was seemingly allowed to be forgotten; but, as soon as civilization began to etamp out savagery again the eyes of man began to look longingly at the' summit and here, too. the white man has said "I will build my lodge of wood and stone, as my predecessor has done of boughs and skins in ages past." How Only rime Kesldenoes. From the time the first red man lived In his tepee at Council Crest down to the present time may be a long cry, but it will be a still longer cry before an other Indian will make this his abode. Fate has ordained that now none but the elite of the white race are to be the future residents of Council Crest, for an enterprising real estate firm has purchased this entire property and will proceed at once to Improve this so as to make it tne cream or, iortiana s se lect residence section. The streets are all to be paved with a hard surface pavement; sewer, gas and water pipes will be laid and no house will be built under a certain cost. Already, the work Is well In hand. A site has been selected for the reservoir, right of way secured for the pipe lino, and suri-eyors are at work on cross sectioning the streets so thai By fall ac tive work will commence to make this the peer of heights property. The car service now rendered by the local streetcar company is probab,ly superior to any in the city even in the busy business district. A large and commodious- hotel is contemplated. This will cater to the tourist only and will be conducted on the line of the famous Hotel Raymond in California, near Pasadena. Xlegaat Homes Erected. Three residences are now built and occupied ort this property, I. A. Teres having recently completed a 116.000 j residence and Mrs. Carson ana Mrs. Powers each have flna residences that run in to the Ave figures, while In addl- 1 K. y...nti "i-- .-...,.. . ... i t- ,t,.r RESIDENCE OF 35. CS. EATON, 1117 E.1WDRK.BT 6'T; NEiVR s37TH. Hon to the hoteMwhlch, by the way, has will commence this fall the erection of a neauuim nome on ine mn ismm juhi east of the obseravtory alongside of which Joseph Hunt, superintendent of the traveling salesmen or JMaistiall progressed to such an extent that the plans have been drawn and approved). Joseph M. Healy, a .local capitalist, is soon to commence the erection of a $15, 000 residence, while Charles Deyette of the Marshall-Wells Hardware company BECK STRUCTURE IS LATEST OF OFFICE BUILDINGS IN PORTLAND en' . -1 5 i - W-f' A, If hi 3 4' i 4,: IS" -.-! a t s r t ' - - , , ?- ' v , " i I I;. -. 1 Wells Hardware company, will build an other. Besides these there are many others to be erected at an early date, Including that of Lute Pease, editor of the Paciflo Monthly, who is the latest to announce his Intention of building at Council Crest, formerly tbe renaeivou; of the red men. where thev sat in coun cil and gravely planned wars and smoked the pipe of peace. EXCHANGES FARM FOR CITY PROPERTY As evidence of his fath, In the future of Portland, W- A. Cald- Q well, McKay 'building, has - changed his 346-acre dairy farm y in Cowlitz county. Wash., with 4 Conrad Kepp for income prop- erty on Union and Grand ave- 4 nues. Mr. Caldwell valued his farm at J 18,000. He Is center- lng all his interests in Port- land and vicinity. Ha acquired some acreage near Lents last year and reports many sales of aero tracts out there recently. OX GROWING MUSTACHE. A Time When Your Friends Get Funny at Your Expense. From the New York Sun. Whether or not raising or attempting to raise a mustache is a crime, a felony or a misdemeanor, is very hard to es tablish, but it Is c4ttain that it is an offense. It must he. because if It were not there would not be so much com ment from your friends and well wish ers. Like having a toothache, starting a mustache la Invariably productive or much advice. "Take it off!" It's a pafa bet that some one will tell you that the very first time it becomes apparent what vU are Intending. That should be said rather sneerinely. The only answer Is something as follows: "'You guys that can't raise hair on your upper Hps are all Jealous. "Did vou Torn this morning?" Is one that is extreme . The Berk building, era the quarter Hock t th northwest corner of Seventh n4 Oak strvets. la th latest completed snd eoe sf .the best buflt office strac tur. In rortiand. - It Is a class "A" ba'M'.r.g. fix storle high. itk the fouftMlA mn4 steei frasss Mary "-; . I" sirrrrt 8r Sd.1itlonal MoriM. ! . r i rr the ct warrants it. - -V't-n trv"J wcrtte r.eors, hcl- Beck Building, Northwest Corner of Seventh and Oak. low tile walls and reesforced con crete stairway from tbe baaetaent to tha to floor. It la l nearly fireproof s tt Is xteeible to construct a balldlng ef this character. Plate glasa has ben need thmugboat the tmildiag, tiling U4 eo ail the corridor flwrs and mart le tfcoartla i Sttad. Tba teulKiag Is eiHirpea wits tua vsoium bee tins sya Um, every ronra etfUe4 with bot an4 rti wir and tnTi t- costrol OliS etevators tare b t&suUeA. Tba outside walls are faced with pressed, cream-colored brick and deco rated with terra cot ta. All tbe rooms are connected by door Jn sack a way that tba offices can b need an suite or Ingle. Facing Oak street the offices are atranrd In suites of three, a large seneral offica tn tba center wkb a reon for prtvte C"t!itattr at one "I and a stenographer room at Um other. " - - ice tire nrrr floors sra Jnlet ana "Did you forget to wash your face aDnronrlate to the earliest stages is used very often by some of our best families. Borne of them do It quite un consciously. It Is very helpful, ' be cause It can be said entirely without thought. The best possible comeback Is: "No, I didn't forget to wash my face I always wash my face. It's nothing new with me." There are more elaborate ones; Q 9av. Rill, vou must have been awful careless when you were dressing this morning. A. How's that? Q Don't you know after vou brushed vour teeth you aorldentallv left the toothbruh on your upper Hp? (Groans ) Also there Is another, where some bright person comes up and asks: "How do you spdl it, with or without the And when you ask "What? he re plies "Mfol ustache." And so on. i here can not reaiiy ne anvimns mean or debasing in attempting to raise a hirsute decoration for tr upper Hp, nt some of the men who sav I believe In going clean shaven" oueht to wear hair all over their faces as an set of charity tn their fellowmen. Realty some persons would have their looks Improved bv It. e One younr man was pestered by well Injentioned folks to know why he ever started a mustache. Tbe reason be fava was euffllenlly fantastic to make hem believe him. "Tog know." said he. Tm reins- to Fpain pretty soon, and over there about the only clean absven person, are bull fighters. Ther aren't in the highest grade of society over there, and rather than take cbancea of being mistaken for a bullfighter I'm going to get a mustache on before I go." ways Intending to liave the thing fixed," but never did it, and by common consent the members of the family usually stepped over It, particularly when the head of the family had gono to oea. One night, very late. Just as Mr. Grlgson was dropping off to sleep some body stepped on that board and it gave forth its customarv loud Drotest. "There you xo again!" he angrily called out. "That's you this time, John! Pretty time of night for you to be getting to bed!" . John, the eldest son, made no re sponse, but instead there was a rush and a jump down the stairs that brought the whole household into the hall Just in tima to hear the front door slam. A hurried investigation disclosed a bag of valuables which a frightened burglar had left. The board still squeaks. BURNED STABLES SIIEJS SOLD Mercantile1 Trust Company Sells Fourth Street Front age at Ankehy Street, The one largereal estate transaction made during the past week was the sale by the Mercantile Trust & Investment company of the Fourth street front of the burned livery stable lot adjoining the Marshall-Wells Hardware company's building on the north. The property has a frontage of 128 feet on the west side of Fourth street with a depth of 100 feet and was sold ror ? (6,ooo the name or tne purchaser being, withheld for the present. It is understood that negotiations are in progress for the sale of the Fifth street front of this property to tbe same nur- choser who will probably put up a large building covering the entire site. to ua useu ior wnoiesaie Dusiness pur poses. NEW REAL ESTATE FIRM OPENS OFFICE Construction of the United Railways company from Portland to Llunton and Hlllaboro and Tillamook has at last boon officially determined upon and will be gin at once. At a meeting of members of the Seattle Dock company with Port land members of the United Railways company, held at the office of the latter In this city yesterday, plana were com pleted , for the project and preliminary arrangements made. At the meeting were Thomas TU Green ough, Morlts Thomson, W. 1). H oft us, ID, E. Emmons, attorney for the company. Chief Engineer Wlckersham and others. The . surveys have been completed and final locations made from Portland to the other side of the hills toward Hills boro, via the Cornelius pass route. Thomas L. Qreenough, who Is the chief of the contracting forces of the company, was not disposed yesterday to say much for publication, but con firmed the statement that the company will positively begin construction im mediately. He said: "About seven miles of steel rails or dered some time ago are now enroute to Portland, and will be here within a few days. We have all neoessarv nnn. struotion outfits conveniently at hand wnro we can snip mem at a moment s notice to the uolnt of conatrnnttnn work. Wo will begin work at once. The road will run out of Portland via the Llnnton route, which is an easy grade for a line to get over the hills to ward Hlllaboro." "Since it has been reported that thim road will be built to Tillamook the nn. pie of Portland and Tillamook have been much Interested to learn of the pany's intentions toward the coast la that your destination?" he was asked. iixai is wnat wo intend to do," was his somewhat evasive reply, and noth ing moro definite could be obtained, Mr. Oreonough being averse to talking cvon about the plans under way for the Hillsboro line. He said it was the policy of himself and friends not to "blow" about things that were to bs done, but to go and do them. The party of Seattle men hero went out yesterday In automobiles over the route of the proposed line from Portland to Hillsboro, and Inspected the country with a view to estimating Its traffic possibilities. Donations for Nurses' Cottage In the personnel of J. IL Shields and C C. Hickok, a new real estate offlce has been opened with offices on the third floor of the Gerllnger building. Messrs. Shields and Hickok are by no means new to the real estate busi ness in Portland, as Mr. Shields was formerly manager of the farm depart ment of the Washington & Oregon Realty company and Mr. Hickok had charge of the city property of the name company. They will make a specialty of Oregon and Washington farms and in conjunction will handle olty real estate. PARK STREET SALE REPORTED CLOSED Struck Flow Pure Water. Pushing down a drill until a depth of 2,980 feet was reached, at Edgmont, N. D., railroad engineers were reward ed by a flow of pure water which gushes out at the rate of 850 gallons a minute. A steer owned by Elijah B. Rico of Charlton county. Missouri, originally valued at 30, on account of a quarrel between two farmers, has cost fn liti gation $10,000. It is reported that the Beck Investment company has soM to Mrs. Caroline Trimble a tri angular shaped lot on the south east corner of Ankeny and Nohth Park street for $10,000. Mrs. Trimble owns the adjoin ing lot and is contemplating putting up one building on both lots. Gilbert Residence on Survey of Proposed Vista Avenue Good Rurjrlar Alarm. From fi Youth's Cornnanlcn. At the tnt of the stairway In the Grtrenn dwelling there was a board that emitted a lond ereek whoever ariT- ars now rariuly ftwicg ey witn tenauia.iboJy atepptd en 1U . Mr. CtJgsoa waa al- ' 1 ; V- : . - fa , 'III IV - ' Tl ' ' II ",i I? -. j ." " , - .'!. f M "- - -it - . ri ; ' - ' ; " " ,ifnif That nurses' cottage how about Itt Were you ever sick and dlsoouraged, barred out from your home and your friends, with nothing t6 think about excepting how hot you were and how your temples throbbed , and how heavy your limbs had grown? And you wondered if there really was any air in this world that wasn't tlnjred With ether and Iodoform and rar- b61io acid? " And then like a breath of that very mountain air that you had"T5egun to think didn't exist, the trained nurse stepped into the room and arranged your pillow and smiled hopefully down at you and you felt yourself grow cool and that beating in your head was for gotten and the blue and white of her fresh frock somehow spelled hope and comfort. You thought there was nothing in the world like a nurBe, didn't you7 And you told yourself that any time you could help her out that all she would havo to do would be to say the word. But somehow health forgets. Those nurses aren't rich. And even the strongest of them once in a while reaches the point where she wonders if she will be able to look cheerful when she enters the sick room, whether she will be strong enough to keep sane and quiet and sensible in. ne face of each new ordeal. If she has an iron consti tution she does It. If she hasn't well any number of things are apt to happen and one of them the most likely one ia tuberculosis. That's what the nurses' homo is for. Out at the Open Air sanitarium thero Is a place that has been selected by the Visiting Nurses association as tho site ror a culluKe where nurses suffering from tuberculosis can have rest and ?'ood air and wholesome food and where hey have a good chance yes better than that for recovering what they havo lost while caring for you and those a thousand times moro wretched than you evpr were. It's going; to take $1,000 to build that cottage. That $1,000 seems like a ridic ulous amount for 200.000 people in Portland to raise as a gift to those who have some time or other made you hap pier and stronger at the expense of their own reserve power of good nature and will, and health. That nurses' cottage how about it? The Journal has started tho subscrip tion list. . It wants every man and wo man in Portland who has ever felt that the world Is the better for the nurses to help. It doesn't make any difference how little your subscription is sond it in to The Journal as a gratitude gift. Since opening the fund Friday night Miss Etta Morris, Georfre W. Bates and W. H. Hurlbut have come In with $10 each. That makes the list of subscrip tions us to noon yesterday as follows: The Journal $ 10 C. B Jackson 10 F. W. Mulkey 3 0 J. N. Teal 10 Miss Etta MOrrls 10 W. H. Hurlbut George W. Bates. . Dr. George Wilson G. w. Gates John vogt F. 8. Stanley Russell Hawkins 1" 10 10 10 10 10 10 Clarence ifGilberfg Portland Helghtg Home. The residence of Clarence, H. Gilbert, Vista avenue. Just beyond the Ford street bridge. Is the only house that will havo to be torn down to make room for the widening .and, irsrrevlng of Vista avenue as proposed by the aristo cratic dwellers cfl Portland Heights. Tho building stand on the hillside oast of and Just off tho narrow roadway and commands an outlook over tbe city thst is unexcelled and probably uneqaalad by that of any ether alto In tho city. Mr. Gilbert owns an area en tho hill side equal to a lot and a half, and two years ago built bis present borne thero at a cost ef between IS.oeo-aod tf.oes. It Is a thre-etnry U-rootB building. mD'h of tne Interior finish being-dona in hardwood. " Ihe sito'of tho residence, iorg. Bar row lot, will be entirely destroyed for building purposes, as store than ons half of IIS width will be osed In widen ing the avenue to the proposed feet. The viewers annotated to assess the damages and benefits to tbe property la tho heights district will come In con tact with a difficult problem when It cornea to awarding damages" to tho prop erty on the east side of tho avenue, a part of which will bo appropriated ta widening tho road war. AU of tho lota o that tide of Vista avenue are Irregular la she pa, having their greatest length parallel with tbo avenoo. - Tbo result wUJ bo that prac tically U of these lots will have to be port-baeed outright by the city, to be paid for cut of a fund ralfl by aseee roent asdlnet all nf tho orcpertjr ta tb Ic.preT we to t district. , LACK OF AMERICAN SHIPS DISCOURAGING The lack of American merchant ves sels Is particularly noticed at Panama, where, with the exception of a little freight carried by five passenger steam ens, all the material and supplies used in the construction of the Isthmian cabal snd the Panama railroad are re ceived in foreign bottoms. The number of tranjps or cargo steam ers arriving st this port and at tho adlacent American nort of Cristobal with cargoes from tho United States for the Isthmian canal and Panama railroad showed an Increase during 1907 of about 12 per cent over the number in li04. which mounted to 104 vessels, of a to tal tonnage of 232.40s. Of these vessels sbout SO per rent were Norwegian and the remainder British, the United States being totally unrepresented. The only American lino of steamships connect ing this port with the outsldo world is the Panama Railroad Steamship lino of five steamers which arrive and depart from the American port of Cristobal, canal son. This state of affairs can fartially bo accounted for by tbe faot hat In the United States st tho present time very few vessels, steam or sail, " are being constructed to carry the prod ucts of the United States to foreign countries. There are eight separata foreign steamship lines plying In the trade of this port, the majority of which sched ule weekly sailings, which fact demon strates .the appreciation of and Interest taken In the trade of tbo port by foreign companies, and further emphasises the necessity ef aa American merchant marine. A novel will has bean vnearthed at Plngbamtoa. N. 1, dated February t, II7. It Is a pmg document and la made by Jacob Biaokweil. transferring his , heirs ths property known as' Blsekwslls Island. Ho also bequeathed a farm wher lng island city Is bow situated.