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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1908)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND. SATURDAY EVENING, AUGUST 29, 1903 10 MHO III I he I'll! I'lKht )ire. Willi' punt llir.-f dull Hlltnlll !'" m n lnir-nf of liOlM'iill Alld ii II;.' I H 10 S "IliiW II III llif I'nllt-d Slain. II. iTi- I" ii n appai ''HI I , tor Mi .1 K I n M f ' mm cti.li.-.s.s n 1 1 1 1 1 .v of null i I ii. ml; In.-; ' wilcr I'll i iu nnnnpj UUIIUI. I;1 i l.e Mint i vi- m . r i Manufacture Should Be Varied, j Ili-fJ.llr till' I IH'I lll-'I.K U III' !! II r of lino u.io, Inn, .' Ill III- . .i.llill . wr i ... r 1 1'1 1 l.i v iii I h M 11 ft, i . i 1 y .1.1 . .-nili.g fr-'in Ini lliltiK lit'' l''..HI''l. m;iiin fii. I hi ! .-l r( of wM.'ll " lao n mi I i-rli-f- . r J 1 l."t'".' worth K In (i-l I A l.illll. i-l Can jStiippiulmis Tntlusl r.v Ho Fvnrossw ( Mil V nil'' , ....... , llih rIVnn Those Who du'uU' It Nwk to liroadoii Operations. .i in I I I i ' '.. I ".ill.l. ' lil II: f .1 ' I "f i 1 mih mi I'.o t nr. Men ill 1 1..- pf I. n. I ii n. . i ri i-ri l I Nur'li i ' i ..Mini . nl Ml I.. ..flli w. .1 Into ii 1 1 -, i-l in a n 'i f n . I u ri- r "i . -,l ! .ir-'li- ii n n i K'.i Ki.-.itcr mill in. .ri' vn . f , -..I i . .ii i ii I In' mm I Ii j I lii tlinl would II" I" I Tiiklntf it n .ivi-rugo i , ,i inn rr... of Sim "H" j upk i iih f Igori-d ..nt w hn t .nil I'.- mi 't w li'-n liiiiliii- i 1 I I (Vi Ill (. r i.f.-.i of i-1 rt 11 I in i . . toil La v.ilue 1 ' 111 i. . . t'.t.1 in-r found. ; I in.nl.' I il I .iil.-k of tin' elic.1l.. -Ml itialltv , -1.1 nt H . - ii iiinl. .ir I I.' ii i'Miii.1. ' woiil. I l.i inn In fn.Vfi'l'i.iiflO If mini Into iSii-ln-i . nil.r.il.l. i jui.l soi l at :'n il llrr.l Mil' 111KI.,SI X Ii i 1 1 I"! i-i. tun IJy FRKDEKIC J. H VSKIN. (Copyright, 1908, by Frederic J. Hnskln.) Washington. Aug. 29. With tin- In crease of the nation's iratt tftllc industry the manufacture of cotton comes a greater need for r. .operation among the. manufacturers mid among the workers, and a wider understand ing of the problems thnt beset the way. To discuss these problems the Spin ners' International union will meet In Boston on September l, and at thr same time and place the National As sociation of Cotton Manufacturers will hold its 85th annual meeting at Sara tog, aJid on October 20 the Unlfed Textile Workers of America will meet at Cohoea. N. Y. With America grow lng three-fourths of the world's cotton supply- manufacturers and textile wont ers have many plans to devise where- bv so manv snlndles may not attain KtAnH Idle iia thev have during Auk tist of this year, nor call for the large curtailment of cotton poods tliat was necessary in the Carolines. Mea-aurs of th Indaitry. Measured by the number fit splndlfij nearly a quarter of a million all told the United States ranks second In cot ton manufacture among the world's workers. In the manufacture of cotton goods approximately 1,200 establish ments urn devoted to this Industry, em ploying 816,000 workers at a total wafce Of $97,000,000. Capitalized at 1614,000, 600 these establishments turn out an annual product of about 1450.500,000 worth of goods. Of the cotton manufacturing estab lishments North Carolina has 251 Mas sachusetts 210, South Carolina 141. Georgia 138, Pennsylvania 124, New "Yor 112. Of the nearly quarter mil lion spindles one-third are In the south ern states, a most marked Increase hav ing been there during the present year. i gi run. i.. Ih. In.-ornt- wmM iiior.- than i-i:..'it;h to -ott.iti nml wnolrn mills In I An 1 w li i 1.' n.'lth.-r h" n reply comparative figures of living ex penses and wages were shown between tne snop girl ami tne mm gin. wnn me superior advantage for the mill girl. In vestigators in the mater or industrial hyglere have found that In up-to-date factories the percentage of deaths from tuberculosis is lower than among wom en who go out to domestic service.. Machinery's Use lacr aaslng. There are thousands of women work ing In the factories, and tnousnnas more children. But machinery of a newer and Improved make In slowly but surely pushing botli away in favor of men who ran do heavier work and manage more machines at once. An economic phase of the question has showed the manufac turer that each child employe wastes it would be I more tr.an ne saves in ino matter or wrap around wages. inrougn uie nouui progressive men are anKiug lf.ir ciiiujiuiHiuv i-uutii-tlon laws that will taku children out of the factories and put them into schools. It has been only US years since Wil liam Hlater came over to Rhode Island and T'stablifuhed the first water power cotton mill. It is even longer since the days that Thomas Jefferson had his prlvato factory- on his Virginia planta tion making 2.000 yards of cloth a year for his family's and his slaves' use. The ponderous fashion of weaving has long sone. Machinery with the precision of a Thrums weaver and the rapidltv of despite the fact that mills were cfoso.1 In manv sections for a while this sum mer. South Carolina, for example, has an Increase of 14J.220, spindles and 2.587 looms, aggregating 192,000,000 new capital, and giving employment to 1,386 more operatives. The crop of the cotton vear of 1906-7 sent to the mills for last year's manufacturing purposes was 5,195.984 bales, averaging 500 pounds each, o" 2,f.97.99'2,000 pounds in all. The cloth mills used over four fifths of this, and the balance was distributed among the yarn spinners, hosiery mills, woolen and worsted mills, the carpet, waste and silk manufac turers. Allowing an average of four yards of goods to every pound of cotton ther were 7.771,984.000 yards of goods made last year. Were all this woven In one continuous piece nf sufficient length to the entire earth 179 times and nearly around again. If the cloth were Stretched between the earth and the moon It would measure the distance 19 times and leave a large-sized rem nant far the bargain counter. The weight rf the cotton goods varies with the fabric, all exported goods usually averaging 2.96 yards to the pound. Production Can Be Increased. The number of 500-pound bales pro duced bv the world last year was slightly "over 16.500.00u. and of these the United States furnished nearly 11. 000.000. It Is believed by those who have studied the situation and who know the possibilities of land In the south, that 16.000,000 bales ought o come from that section. As yet the resources of the south In this particu lar direction have not been fully proved. Government experts under Vr. Knapp. have given practical demonstra tions in Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama. "ni the result has si-read.- been measured in better and larger crops. Cotton Picking- Eats Up Time. It Is the picking of the cotton' that takes so much time for the farmer While one man with the proper ma chinery can cultivate 30 acres, It takes four men picking an average of 100 pounds of cotton a day to harvest the crop. Last vear s crop required for its harvesting the united efforts of 1.500.000 persons working four months Improvemoril s In the manner of handling and storing cotton have arisen with an awakened intelligence among the farmers. Within the past year cot ton warehouses to the number of 500 have been bull! by the Farmers' Edu cational and 'oopirat 1 e union, of Am erica, through the rotton belt of lh south the cost of each being from $10,000 to $50,000. Harvy Jordan. Tiresident of the Cotton Growers' as sociation, is working for better i-om- ( ,),, outranked In pressing in cotton naies. ah mmc; win mill, ale mucii-,1 a laripr rrmi ami ' a better erade of rotton. I r'rom Port Phlliip With three-fourths of the crl. supplv c-f .-ott-'n raised In this i o..n trv the Increase in "pinoles In th.- t'nlted Ptstes bns hern orly I" I in ! vol II i..- $r, i.o buv all tin tin- world. any one cImo wnuld'advocate the making of' nil North i 'n roliiia s cotton output Into either duck or Swiss ernhi old.'i v. It shows wh.it opportunities await ,the manufacturer." Cotton Support Whols Towns. The Industry has built ami supports hundreds of towns whose business and whose population depend entirely on the mills and fat 'furies. In Lowell, Mass., for exumtile, there are 800.000 spindles, and 26.000 looms with a wide variety of goods as the output of the establish ments. The factories of this city con sume 100, 000, 000 pounds of cotton per year, requiring 4.000 freight cars to deliver the raw cotton. Averaging four yards to the pound Lowell ships about 400,000.000 yards annually. The goods goes out in packages of all sizes, from a small one that a traveling man could tuck under his arm. to a large house like box whoso only restriction in size is that it must be in proportion to the width and height of boxcar doors. In lowell Idencheries 6", 000 pounds of cloth urn treated dally. Tno Laborers in the anllls. The problem of securing and holding operatives is one of the biggest ones among the manufacturers. The south bus levied on the poor whites, anil through the lienvoliiu'e of mill men In the mater of texlilo schools, primary education, churches, sai Itary hmnes and villages and settlement work, these peo ple are finding a newer and better sys tem of living. In tho New Kngland states immigrants from the old world and from Canada are the hands em ployed. Wherever they are these opera tives have come in lecently for a good deal of attention at the hands of wel fare workers, reformers and statesmen. A Boston paper recently provoked con troversy by objecting to the establish ment of a new mill In East Boston, savlntr that the establishment repre sented ono of the lowest paid Industries in the United States and that the opera tives did not receive llvlnn wages. In I Mill ;JertJ - !! in3" - ..... iuUr,: '. l.'i ... .;., -i -i ni,iw,.-jl-v..-;" a.4 -v i. , ?,.- -Jf -.1 :. 1 1 -; vf:-i : s:?.i --'i-s,Wi;?.' 1 Soiling Dulldlug, Grand Avenue and Belmont Streets. CONTRACTS ARE LET FOR SCORES OF BUILDINGS More than half a hundred residence contracts were lit during th present week, most of them being for cottages which will cost when completed $2,000 or ltss. H. W Gerke is about ready to let the contract fur a nine-room two-story residence to be built on Peninsular ave nue at a cost of $2,500. P. Van Iatta has begun the erection of a cement block dwelling In Rose City Park. PIhjis were drawn by Architects Claussen & Claussen and the contract let to Imvidson Murphy. II F (Jerspacrt has commissioned Architect Kroner to get up the drawings for a two-story six-room dwelling to be erected at Kast Thirty-second and East Salmon streets Kraff & Lawrence have the contract Tor a $2,000 dwelling for Mrs. M. G-. Clark, Alberta street between Mallory and Garf streets. F. H. Galbralth. for a $2,000 dwelling for F.dith Van Vlctt. Graham avenue between Rodney and Union avenues. J. O. Williams will -build an $l.S0O dwelling on East Salmon street between East Fortieth and East Fprty-flrst streets. James MeGuIre will erect an $1,800 home on East Eighteenth street between Alberta and Sumner streets, William L. Whit I $1,800 dwelling on tween Marguerite Henrv Hall will build a $1,500 dwell ing nt Glen avenue and Preseott street. J. Becker will build a $1,600 cottage at Brooklyn. D. H. McFarlane will i-k will build an Clinton street be- and Thirty-fifth build a $1,900 dwelling on East Twenty-fourth street between Alberta and Mildred streets. H. W. Heiaenreter has taken out a permit for the erection of a $1,600 home to be erected on East Twenty-seventh street between Emerson street and Kllllngsworth avenue. J. S. Reagan is also to build a $1,600 homo on East Twenty-ninth street, near Hawthorne avenue. E. Miller has begun the erection of a two-story cottage on Ohio street be tween liamllton avenue ami Bancroft street. When completed it will have cost $1,600. Willlamsen & Bodwell will erect a $2,000 residence In Glen avenue between East Main and East Salmon streets. Fred Windier will build a $2,000 dwelling In Wasco street between East Twenty-first and East Twenty-second streets. Homer P. Angell has let the contract to A. C. Meyers for the erection of a $5,000 residence on Montgomery drive near Fern avenue. The building Is to be a modern noma. In every respect, and will be one of the handsomest of tho many new heights structures. Mrs. Jennie R. Hnil has contracted with F 8. Halleck for the erection of a $1,600 ' cottage on East Seventeenth street between East GlisaJi and East Flanders streets. F. J. Payne and II. N. Smith have each let the contract for $1,000 cottage In east side suburban district. I. Grabel has begun the erection of a $1,200 house on East Sixty-seventh street between the P.ase Line road and East Ptife street. E Miller and John Kirby each build ing $1,200 homes. Sine former on Hamil ton avenue. South Portland, and the lat ter on Sumner street near1 Alblna avenue. i i CLASS A" TYPE OF BIDIUGS Excavation Under Way for Several Fireproof Struc tures in the City. B2-ST0RY COSIS $12,000,000 FOR LENTS GRANGE lightning eliminates the reed of human labor, minimizes time, and Rets a par" fol- for the factories of the world to low in the new era of Industry. MELBOURNE IS all mm deception to Fleet on a Scale Not Exceeded on the Entire Cruise. Equitable to Erect Largest Building in the United States. Bv Cl'.twnrthv, ndei.t Aboard Unite.! the U Fr'-si S. S .0no.onii H I. i -orresi Georgia Melbourne. Aug. 29.--The Atlantic fleet arrived here at 3 o'clock this ft ernoon and was accorded a welcome niHgnlf icance any- tl ir.g so far on this eventful trip. Hi-.-idfl to the an' h or;iiie Rr-'iiii'ls in F'ort I'liillp bay, a 'Ms tan, e (if 31 nii!ei. t(,e entrance of the '.hlte sijiiaiirnn wis one long (nation. THE TRUTH ABOUT KIDNEY TROUBLE Kidney trouble l Inflsmma Ion of the ' kidneys due to colds. eiposcr. worry, excesses r efine and -lrir.klr.i? etc Backache i we.dom n eiiden.e of n fiammstion of ti.e kidneys Smoklnes or sedlmint ths' can h seen with the naked eye are n -t ;s.,aily evidences of a very serious of the Irifin- matlcin Both often sre-w in people otherwise well an I -'r-.m.'nly dlsarper wi'h the ex-itlng rmi" The patient h..ild diet avoid cold and live 'arefully and the ordinary case of kidney triuMe will wi", care and treatment, usually d!srsr the first few weeks If it persists, or there jrhmild be con tinued evidence of disordered kidneys. M shnnlll demsnd t sttentlor of th All doubt has been removed as to the ere.-tlon of the 62-story office building by the Equitable Life Assurance society I on the site of its present office quarters j nt Broadway and Nassau streets. New ! York The plans have been submitted I to and approved by the building inspec i tor The plans represent the most am j bltlmis building enterprise as yet project.-, In Wtls country, calling for an ex penditure of $12,000,000 in the construc tion of a most perfectly designed build I in K so far as comfort, convenience and I safetv are concerned, and one that will 1 house a greater number, of office wurk ! ers than any other two buildings in the world. A corps of expert construction an nantrnrv onflneers have lust fin- I ished a critical examination of the arch itect's drawings. Beqanrei Many Drawing. To me-t the improvements suggested bv the examiners 12 additional construc tion drawings were submitted and the vast plumbing equipment proposed, was modified In Important respects. The vain.- of these daily conferences ex tended as a courtesy to the visiting architects was shown by the fact that when the examination of the plans was finished a single dav. only was required f.-r t lie designers to meet the amend ments. 17 in number, recommended by the department engineers, and the su- ; I crintendent was enabled to tase nis flr.nl favorable action at once wnen ine necessary amendments were presented. Wind Braoas Considered. The nlnns are ar.Droved with the COHGRETE Hill The first reenforced concrete building to be erected In the Mjnunt Scott district will be a public hail built at Lents by the Lents Orange Hall association. Plans for the structure, which Is to be 40 bv 88 feet, two stories high, are be ing prepared by two members of the grange. Nearlv all the construction work will be done by members of the organization, who have subscribed days' work to the building fund. Four store rooms will be on tha ground floor, and the second story is to be entirely devoted to a lodge room. Several fraternal orders with lodges at Lents have spoken for the ball, there being no suitable lodge room in the town The building will be finished as i..miHi. no uiGulhU irt nnlor to fnrnlll the Lents Indites with quarters before ( winter comes on. Excavating Is In progress on three prominent downtown corners, and work will begin on the fourth in a few days, preparatory to tho erection of modern fireproof buildings of the class "A" type. On the Meier & Frank Crirner at Sixth and Alder, and the Lombard corner at Fifth and Stark, the excava tions are about completed, while the ex cavation has .lust begun on the Charles K. Henry corner at Fourth' and Oek streets. Soon after September 1 the big steam bucket will begin lifting dirt at Seventh and Stark streets, where Theodore B. Wilcox will put up an eight or 10 story annex to the Imperial hotel.. It Is understood that the lessees of the quarter block at the northwest cor ner of Fourth and Alder streets have completed their arrangements and will soon begin the erection of a six story hotel on that site, The Lahbe estate yesterday took out a permit for the erection of a six story reenforced concrete building at Eighth and Everett street? to cost $100,000. The building is to La occupied bv the Blumauer-Frank Uriig- company, and will be Frected by the Jiprthwest Bridge Works. Q --,,, ST. JOHNS HAS FIDS FOR DOCK The city of St. Johns has on hand the funds with which to erect a public dock. The council has ordered the city engineer to ret up the plans and pro ceed with Its construction. It is pro posed to build tho dock at the foot of Philadelphia street, tne main tnorougn fare reaching the river from the busi ness center. A portion of this dock will be double deckiKl. tho whole to be modeled after the Alblna dock of the O. R & N company. By the time the structure is completed the O. R. N will have double tracks extending to il affording excellent shipping facilities to the merchants of the enterprising little city. No matter what kind of a heating plant you are going to install, we have the men, the materials,' and we GUARANTEE satisfaction. That's what you pay for not a pile of cast or sheet iron, but a satisfactory heat ing plant. TheW.G. McPherson Company HEATING ENGINEERS 328 Glisan Street Portland, Ore. as m TRYING TO CONCEAL MERIT I nl . 4 ft COPYRiOHr. v- in a worthy paint Is out of the ques tion If you test It sufficiently In order to prove Its worth. Sun, rsln and the ravages of time play havoc with Inferior paint but the merit orious kind suffers little or not at all. Our BAY STATE paints meet every practical test. 8 H B M M M H H THE BIG PAINT STORE S M H H B) If H fisher, Thorsen & Co. FRONT AND MORRISON STS. vsocafoi WEMTflE GARAGE Thou sri i d of olenm.re .raft hnd c. n- out to it - heads to meet the Ameri-..n ' agreement bv the architect that the battleships ard the shores w-ere line.;! : n,jbracing of the lofty structure will with almost as many people as wit rea,Pr Uian at firBt provided and r.sd the entrance of the fleet Into Sar. I .hat Additional staircases will be in- f-talled for the use of the army of occu Francisco harbor The (r:!',hh cruiser Ppyche boomed her cannon 13 times and dipped her fine to the t'linnotKui as ?!-.e entered the liart.-r and the salute wuh returned. Mthough the offhia; landing of the o'liers .mi n : "f the f!et will r -t Ipk" pin( e net-; Mnn.li corning. i mira Sperry a - d i Is t.iff came mil rrp todsv and pRii an off ial vis't to (-, Sir Reginald A T Ta'r-ott. governor of Victoria. II" entertal'ied them with H dinner and later returned their offl-Mi ol on bo.ird the for.r.ei-ttcut. tents, and furthermore that eacn dou ble line of stairs shall be enclosed in fl'eproof partitions and fitted with iron d.i.nn th. Installation of the additional 'air and of the partitions and doors In -.ueM'.on making It feasible to do away w'.ri cer-."r fire escapes, ample means of "ill I.etTig assured without them. The floors are all to be of the seg mental flrcuroof arch pattern, built of ttr. hi,, i filled In with concrete, and other f (reproofing will be installed to th satisfaction of the superintendent, : iti if ON SEVENTH SI. Work , has begun on the second gar age to e built by E. H. Wemme withlr. the present year. The structure going up now Is on Seventh street between Couch and Burnslde streets. iT Is to be of brick construction, two stories high and when completed will represent an expenditure of between $ 1 6,000 and $20, 000. Contractor W O Orlfflth has been awarded the contract for the erection of a two-story brb k store building on Third street, between Ankeny and Burn si le. The building (s being erected for the Burke estate and will cost about ! 2,000. J. C. P Westengard has let the con tract for a I rn to he erected on Front street between Montgomery and Harri son streets. When completed It will cost $6,000. r IO AJl" walls also will be thicker than 1 In the original plans. This men la made to conform to the z co!e requirements, and as an tmtiert In viem of th l medical wrM!- that pislttor rsaen tr-'.ui lie pi x i-i twr ifcnriil . nwintl. iKj Inflamwl oiti.lillATl rbr-inV n1 incurshle 'v-an bv the Fnilh sresklng people It will be wn through all the above' Temormw will r. spent quietly No that tHe real tr"ubie is Inflammation in .' visit. 'n will be allowed on hord the American rshlr until Monday The tienjal devotional services on ail the ship will be observed the idnevp While there are many kidney stimulants they hav been abaadnced by phyairiana. for they now know thai nrse of them carry repair T u;7-rui,c ,he nr.. J PRETTY BrNOAI)' bant that reach the kidneys It r-v the eld irwimwiL In- ImI of Irrllstlaa h lefkamed kidney with attmalams the ffe-t Is tha arad aai rdc-ttni of th. lnfiammaiWta aai lor to rtrM tlm kidney aMaaaaa, K(1h is tha flrat an4 stay Is ti. t tr4tiML rultna Renal Cofn poa4 kaila he leriamsnattoa la at-e- t IT fwr ce" ef a) cap joHs a. rtxTnH co, OUitnl Cal fktdjwwa Tvb Oa.' Ill TTr atra-t. A't t a-ie I -cal sgetMa Ask tnr IH Hnnihlj 1ji lal r c-i i lea. 1eoourr,e is i rnw.Vi w !th thoi.-sis end ih of peorV mho have coT-e from the Inter- pri ;osi lor to vls'.t the citv iurirg the stay i lint r"v tt fire! Her Ef'0.('-' rr nl a 1 1(. n has'b-iildr fTi fc.-clv increase i Kn-1 everv on.- Is a.1 d ! ' tor.a 1 protection the building will besm'ng a welcome upoi. th Amfh-tr he eo-npped w;m auxiliary fire appara sHors ' 1 1 1 s ..-on. pricing standpipes extending I The newspapers of the city sr.. nil i through the entire edifice from the i-el-' warm In !htr expression" if welcome 'r to the t .p floor of the great tower. press urges n ur-der'tandirg be- ' t'- ri' re:ng prov i.iei witn exterior -eat Hrltaln ami the i n:fi ai-tnt-r- - !. ni ai-n umn tea for the M.tmt of the Pacific i r:itn ;'h s )tne or hose wHtl nni- nn.j i-'i'iipre-i witn wrenrnes. rire se and r-'her fir f'ghtlng apparatus readily socesniie whn needed, and at least one elevator will he kept always In readiness for the use of the firemen both night and day in case of fire. AJapl Water Vapply. The plumbing plant as approved will I be th Jargett sirgle equipment of the f'fil'VTDV T)T t fV "ina nesigneo ir.us jar m tne worn and I MM .M li I 1 li.W ry,wlli provide nine large house sewers. nine house dmlna. six linej of soil plps. $4 lines of waste pipes end seven sep- Om f the prttlet cmntry burga- ! srat Inlets for fresh etr - llterallr miles er. There will he an automatic filtering plant through which nil water for the use of tenants will osss In connection with the fiuxilliry flte standpipes, so) that the use of the fire hose will In no wise affect the regular water sup- j ply The plan In for the mammoth elevator plant required for the building have not yet been s.ibmltt.-d, this being a detail that Is usuallv not attended to urjtil the construction work proper on buildings is fsr advanced. Welnhard's Malt Tea, a non-alcoholic and non-intoxicating beer, ready for delivery on and after Sattirdiv, August ?9. 1 H I'hone or mail orders to Henry Weln- hard Brewerv Thirteenth and B streets Main 72; A-llTS . . Portland Oregon What Live Stock Insurance Means That we Insure the lives of your horses, mules and rattle against death by accident or disease for two-thirds their cash value at a very nominal rata Money Invested In llvt stock should be as fully protected against death "from other causes as from fire. One hundred and ninety-nine animals die innually from acci dent and disease where one dies from fire. We have paid $22,000 in losaes from accidents and disease to the owners of live stock In Oregon, Idaho, Utah and Waahlngton. Don't Get Stuck! By purchasing hardware of question able value because the price is a cent or two lower at one place than that asked at another the difference In quality probably outweighs the differ ence In price. Peal only with a reliable house, such as Avery's, where you are certain of getting what you pay fot : where goods are as represented and a dollar buys a dollar's worth. COSYSlCMt AVERY & CO. 4-8 Third St., Bet. Pine & Ash TELEPHOirE MAIV 678. Offices. Rooms 8, 9 and 10 Lafayette Bldg., 313 Washington St. HOLLADAY'S ADDITION The one best place In Portland to buy. Geographical cei.ter and most de sirable residence property of the city. Seeing is believing. Better go and see tha many choice residence, under construction and the lmprovr mend going on. THE REGON REAL ESTATE COMPANY 88 Vi ItllMjy STREET. PORTIA VS. OBEOOH. Hepalr Work Given Prompt Attention Founders. Machinists and Boilermakers. Building and Structural Work. PHOENIX IRON WORKS EM GtME ERS Office and Work. Hawthorne Irinna and East Third Street. Phone Baarl 8. poRTXJtjm, OKXooxr. TTB f Bpsnon f PIJTE I OIBU a LUMBER! I.I7MR1TD 1 f I IMRFD ! Cu...,l - uviuubn unuivj Lxo Cord Wood in Car Load Lots X am selling pine, fir and spruce lumber and cedar shingles making a specialty of handling dry stocks of lumber If there is snythlpg r j want In the lumber line allow me to quote you prices. Please address J. M. MOOkC, 402 Wlls ParKo Bids. OBSAJl Cranberries lw. to t- found snrwhre In the sutaiof plplnr There will be, 1 drinking . . . , , , . . . 'fountains .or marrie together baa Ja he. nnmpiet4 by the Wainot i J.., spray hewer bath In Piaatatlm. ompanr on Its rr'rpert r rer i meet for the use f the engineers 'Wjua The ho- is mtl 1 being only I Ith a the baae- f've rona but the distgn is es-pedalir sttraMlre end tv,e lnerlr.r arrariremrat is Musi It was rwt4 for the see. pe iry of the aunrloteavleat of the plan taUoa. ho a U take poaeessina next wk iM hriv r-rrparicg taa first t cra.tar alactfs. The water supply will be obtained from the city mains through a suction tank, thence coriTeyed to a pun-ip trnre mttttng It to wr steel storage tsnlta each I. feet high aaf II feet rn diam eter. Installed en the thirty-fourth f)nr asd ale tm the roof, each tank betaf prarldad with as automatic pump rtarV . ' ' - 1 Ffl ASTO HAVE YOUR ROOf PAINHO WITH ELAST0 adds yaars wear; kind of roof. I0FIN6 CI.. Mlfi. Mala 4117. FLINTKOTE ROOFINO W. P. FULLER CO., Pacific Coast Agents -CASTINGS FOR MACHINE AND STRUCTURAL WORK THE INDEPENDENT FOUNDRY CO. 23d and York Streets Phone Main 2323, A4221 John A. Melton CAJfcPZaTTU AJTD MVVLBTM Factory and Office X Seoood treat. Dear Main. Phone.: Mala 1 7 IT; A-ITIT 0k Office and Store Flxturea built and remodeled. Altering and- repairing bouaaa, Sbov and Counters built IT TOU flAVE A ROOr TO COTKR FIGCRB WTTH t'S OX Geriasco iRoofing CarriexJ la stock for an kind, of roofs ea 4 fully rtiarantead CENTRAL DOOR & LUMBER CO. lU aa 0Uaaa aHraata 1 nM KaU-Tfa, A imt