The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, November 29, 1908, Page 55, Image 55

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THE , OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, . SUNDAY MORNING,' NOVEMBER . 29, 1908.
7
GIRMffiERED
Will! A RIFLE
An Unknown Thu Attacks
' Miss Kate McNeil at Ker
Home Near Clielialis.
' ::?'''' '::::4 - " . ', : : i i?; '";-
'(Sped Dlapateb to The Joorstl.i
Centralis Wash., Nov. 28. llss Kate
McNeil, formerly , a teacher in" the
schools here, UVinc with her, father
two mtlea southwast of this city.on the
Chehalls road, w attacked by a
masked man armed -with a rifle laat
evening at 6 o'clock. ' ', ' V
Miss. McNeil wu going from tne
house to -the barn, a pall of water In
ai:h hand, when aha heard: the com
mand. "Hold up your handa; don t make
a noise, oi I'll ahoot.' . -; -
looking ; around , aha saw a masked
man with a rifle. , Thinking It waa a
neighbor ahe told him to ''get out.
'"The man struck her over' the head with
the rifle but failed to knock her down.
Bhe seised the gun, jerked It from him
and struck him with it, at the same
time calling for help. : Her father was
In the barn, but he Is very deaf knd
when he heard her call he thought It
was the voice of a neighbors child. '
Mrs. 8. It. Smith, a neighbor, heard
Miss McNeil's criea and came to her
assistance, but not before her assail
ant had regained hia gun and had
.knocked bar senseless and badly beaten
!He "escaped In tha I darknesa The
eheriff -wa notified, and officers are
searching the country. An effort will
be made to secure bloodhounds. -
This outrageous deed, following nu
merous .assaults and holdups, has cre
ated Intense excitiment and if the
guilty party is. captured lynching will
probably be his fate.
GOLD DREDGE TUKNS v
TURTLE IN FKESHET
j . .i mi i i ' ."T'1"'!.'
s "peel1 Dlmtcb to The JcmnwU
Vancouver, B. C. Nov. 28. A grold
dredge which has been aperatlng tf or
some nionths in the Kraser along Hill s
bar, about a mile below Yale, was lost
when the big machine broke away from
her mooring end drifted down -stream
until she turned turtle. She Is now
lying bottom tip about five miles below
Yale, and is reported , to be so stranded
on a sand bar that it may be found im
possible to salve her. The' accident
was due to the snapping of the Inch
and a half steel mooring cable, which
was stretched from bank to bank, and
to which the dredge waa attached, by a
. movable cable. Under the strain ct
. the' sudden rise of the water the -cable
gave way 'and the dredge shot down
the river rapidly. Colliding with a snag,
it careened and tipped ,over.- The dredge
was valued at 150,000. It was built by
New Zealand people two years ago and
was operated by Mort Revesbeck. of
Yale, and Clarence White, of Belling
ham. SOCIETY MAN TAKES ,
' TROLLEY LINE JOB
Philadelphia, Nov. 18. In blue over
alls and a Jumper. E, W. Clark, son of
Clarence M. Clark, banker, and himself
prominent socially, has been making
tests of electric current on the east
aide electric system in St. Louis.
For 10 days young Mr. Clark was
one of "the workmen'r on the St Louis
system, of which hia fatWor is preai
. dent, and during bis stay there1 he ate
in cheap eating houaes and slept in a
modest priced lodging house. His fel
low workers learned to know him aa an
affable, Industrious young man, but at
no time was there the least suspicion
that" he waa other than- one- of thou-,
sandn of young men- who are; just
"making a living."' ;
At home, in Philadelphia, young Mr.
Clark la known in the younger Ger
mantown art, and he Is a---member of
tlis Oerraantown Cricket elub. He had
left St. Louis before his fellow workers
learned .his identity. .n
BANKER'S DAUGHTER ?
1 BEGS AID ON STREET
(Bperlal Dlipetch, fo The JtmrnL
Boston, Nov, 28. Humbly working In
the streets of Boston as a 'captain in
the Salvation Army is Miss Cora Van
Norden. the young , daughter of W.' M.
Van Nordcn, president of ' the Van, Nor
den Trust company, of New York City.
Captain Van Norden arrived -in .this
city last Monday and immediately be
gan heP duties. She recently completed
a course at the Salvation Army Train
ing school. - -
All day Wednesday she stood In the
busy shopping district with a charity
box on 'Which waa ; an appeal -"for
Thanksgiving alms. During the week
she waa very busy getting acquainted
with the Salvation Army , workers In
this city. ; .'i "V. .;'
Captain Van Norden la a friend of
Eva Booth, of the army, and has pre
viously visited Boston with the gener
al's daughter. - , -
Captain Van Norden'a sister, - Emma,
was, also. Interested-in Salvation Army
work. ' She was killed In a carriage ac
cident In Scotland about a year ago..
FRIGHT AT SIGHT OF
; MOUSE KILLS GIRL
.. - '.. i
Florence - N. X. Nov. 28. Miss Mary
Isabella Mead, a-popular young woman,
died last evening from fright at the
sight of a mouse.- .' '
Miss Mead had Just gone-into the
kitchen. A pet cat waa bringing In a
mouse. Miss Mead shrieked:
"Don't bring" that mouse , in here,
T Much frightened, she drew her skirts
closer about her. Suddenly she straight
,ni wA KnmnlftlnM tn hr mother of
a pain in her heart.. In leas than a
minute ene waa oeaa.
A physician said she bad succumbed
to valvular heart disease and her death
ws haatened by fright.
ROASTED TAFT; NOW
WANTS CABINET JOB
. (Special Dtupetch to The Jwid1.1
Pittabufg, Pa.. Tfov. . Z8. ueorge T.
Oliver,- owner of a string of Penrose
machine newspapers in this city, and a
man of great wealth, would be highly
pleased if President-elect Taft would
favor him with a cabinet office some
thing nioe ana uinrnuou, una win piaw
at the head of the department -of .com
merce and labor, or the secretary of
the interior or treasury department.
It is urged In behalf of Oliver a ap
pointment that ha was a most sucoena
ful collector of campaign funds, and
that this, with his own offering pf
$1500. entitles him to consideration in.
the distribution of cabinet portfolios.
Before the Republican national con
vention, it is true, Oliver's newspapers
had much to' say In big' black, type,
about Taft's alleged Insult to the mem
ory of General Grant, but it is argued
tnat tne preaiaent-eieci is proau jhuui
to overlook a iiittie matter une tnau
WOMAN SAVES, MAN IN
PRISON; SILENT YEARS
To Keep Her' Past ft Secret From Her
: Bon, She : Wag Leaving Inno r
. cent Man to Ills Fate. t.
tmt-W t ; RffiBsasaaxzxxxasrsisssxsssssssssssrsszzsssssssassrzi'
i Pea Moines,, Nov. 18. Governor A.: B.
Cummins has pardoned George Weemi,
the' most famous life prisoner In ' the
Iowa penitentiary,
Weems waa sent up . for shooting
Railway Conductor Rldpath, the motive
presumably being : robbery. - But in
Davenport lives a woman -who knows
that Weems waa not guilty, because on
that fatal night the accused man was
in her -company. Now. this woman' is
married and is the mother of a son.
If she told the truth about Weems her
aon would learn of her past, and rather
than that she has remained sphinx-like
through all these years,, permitting an
Innocent man to remain a convict.
This woman's story was learned by
Attorney . J. - A. Dyer, attorney . . for
Weemi Dyer secured from her an
affidavit' on condition that her name
be not divulged. This affidavit was
presented to the board of pardon in
confidence, and ' later to ' the governor.
So atrona waa the impression made that
the governor freed Weems. , The name
of the woman Is still kept secret and
will be preserved inviolate, the cover
nor saia. ... .,.-, ,, v-';;-
TRANSPORT DEC - J
' REACHES MANILA
(united Press Leased Wire.)
Washington, Nov, 28. Tha war de
partment received a dispatch this aft
ernoon from Manila saying that the
transport Dix arrived there a day aneaa
of time. . 1 :
25 per cent off on diamonds at Mets
ger s, 842 Washington street
"Purltana." Ask grocer.
iiKZSEsczzzisiszzxsszsaEziiaiBuinisssszsaxsxszzzza
PI . .. .-.
k Iron Works
O. E. Heintr, Manager. Phone East 57; Home B-1I57
Castings of All Kinds 9
Steel buildings and bridges
IN STOCK 3 to 24-inch Beams, 4 to 15-inch Channels,
to 8x8-inch Angles. "
East End Burnside Street Bridge Portland, Oregon g
EisarorcKMiBBBraBSKn
X ' - - 4 ' - - t H
wnwam
' . : t , '.
A FEW CHOICE LOTS LEFT
pOandUp
! $25: Down and ?I0 Per Month
) GRADED STREETS, CEMENT WALKS
BULL RUN WATER
TWO CARLINES
.P.SHARKEY GO.
i i I22V2 Sixth Street, Cor. Washington
A 3537 PHONES Main 550
4
v Take W.-R. Cars and Get Off at 35th St.
Our Agent is on the Tract All Day
I:
(
i
" 'Way back in May, 1887, there was an agreement
drawn up by the owners of IRVINGTON, as it was?
then platted, and the owner of that portion of IRV-
, INGTON that is now, designated and described as
PROSPECT PARK, which agreement is on record .
nd "is in part as follows: ;:
"That, whereas the said parties are now the owners of
that part of the William Irving Donation Land Claintf lying
east of the town of Albina, and not heretofore laid off into
lots and blcks, and it is deemed for the joint benefit of all
parties that the same should be laid off uniformly
that the said first party (owning what is now called PROS-'
PECT PARK) not beingjdesirous at this time of laying off
or dedicating that part, desires to secure the laying off of
the part of the same ovfoied by the other oarties on such a
plan as may be in conformity with the plan on which the
owner of the first part desires, when the same shall be laid
off and dedicated as a towns ite, s I, said Eliza
beth Irving, have and do hereby covenant and agree with
(parties of the second part) that whenthe tract of land so
now owned by me (which is the tract now designated as
PROSPECT PARK) shall be laid off into lots and blocks,
that it shall be laid off in accordance with the plat hereof
herewith filed, and not ; otherwise; as a part and parcel of
said general plat of ''IRVINGTON,' -and with numbering
of blocks and names of streets as shown in the accompany
ing plat." '."
METZGEI
For Fruit and Vegeta
bles there is no better
land to be found than
our property, while for
.
Waluuts
and
Cherries
It is ideal, with hundreds
of acres to chooseifrom.
We can offer you level
land, rolling land, cleared
land, partly cleared land,
all timbered land, and
northern, southern, east
ern and western expos
ure land, and land that
cannot be equaled for the
prices anywhere. Call
at office for plats.
ACRE
Metzger Acre Tracts
OFFER BIG
INDUCEMENTS TO
INVESTORS AND
HOMESEEKERS.
CHOICE LOCATION
FINE LAND
EASY REACH
' WEST SIDE
NO BRIDGES
FREQUENT SERVICE .
QUICK RIDE
ONLY
THIRTY MINUTES
FROM
JEFFERSON STREET
STATION ON
OREGON ELECTRIC
Only $200 Up
PER ACRE
ASK YOURSELF
ARE YOU
OR OTHER
WISE?
TRACTS
If you are seeking art
ideal country homesite,
land for cultivation or
land for investment,
Metzger
Acre
Tracts
Offer you the iest op
portunity of any land
proposition on the Pa
cific coast. Remember,
the Oregon Electric line
is the best line out of
Portland, and land so
close in 30 minutes
will treble in value in a
few years. Visit Metz
ger and judge for yourself.
Hillsioro
Acres
The finest tract of land on the Hillsboro branch of the Salem
Electric Line. All in a high state of cultivation and only
three1 eighths of a mile from electric station and one mile
from Hillsboro. The soil is rich black loam, very deep and
adapted to walnuts or any variety of fruit culture. Only
one mile from a nursery containing 1100 acres.
FREX TO ONE,
BUYER
A substantial and attractive dwelling will be erected on one
of these 5 acre tracts and given to the purchaser absolutely
free. Cfll at my office and get full particulars of this novel,
proposition.
Conservative Investment
LOW PRICEEASY TERMS ONE PLUM .
SWEXT
204 CORBETT BUILDING
1 11 II ? - 'iiliHiiHKIil
v fc7 pjjj
zm& ip IS ISili'i'i'li iS i
WbzJ 1MB Sli fl 1 1 H Hi "ft H HF1 1 ' ; 1
ife iife lit ii ii
I , I vM Lg fc-j) Ir.-d tiiM YM YZA yziWA A M
Note on the above plat that the diagonally ruled portion
is IRVINGTON, the cross ruled part being, that part of
Irvington called PROSPECT PARK. Observe that
PROSPECT PARK is just one block east of the Union
avenue car lines.
HERMAN METZGER. Owner
226-228 Front Street, Phones M 474, A1374
Metzger Station, Phone M 6409
BMdoa
Sea
LOTS ARE SOARING IN
"Sweeney's First Addition to Bandon"
One Invester Alone Takes Over 200 tots. Ask . ;
4
FARMS AND ACREAGE
iy ACRES on the Oregon City carline, facing good public road;
11 good stump pasture; soil rich and land lies well; PRICE only
$300 oer acre: terms to suit the purchaser. 5 acres at Jennings Lodge.
! 2 acres cleared, balance good timber; facing on good public road;
PRICE, $265 per acre. Must be sold within the next thirty days,
80 ACRES in Washington county; 10 acres cleared; IS acres
lashed ready to burn; balance very light timber: soil rich, land lies
'. well; never-failing stream of water. Price only $125 per acre; terms
to suit the purchaser. s
70 -ACRES, 11 miles southwest of Portland; 20 acres cleared;
10 acres good timber, balance good stump pasture; never-failing
stream of water; good well; handy to school, churches, etc.; $135 per
acre; terms to suit the purchaser.
40 ACRES in Washington county; all cleared; all well plowed
and in high state of cultivation; never-failing stream of water; f ac
ting on good' public road; soil rich and land .lies well. PRICE, $175
per acre; one third cash, balance easy payments.
, 40 ACRES 8 miles northwest of Portland; all good, heavy timber,
estimated at 4000 cords of wood; only V miles from the Linnton
and Hillsboro carline, where the wood will more than pay for the
place; soil rich and land ties well; adjoining good public school.
PRICE only $80 per acre; terms to suit the purchaser.
35 ACRES, 3 miles west of St. Johns; on good public road; 15
acres cleared, balance very light brush; well watered by never-failing
'.' stream; 'soil rich; land lies well;, handy to school, churches,- etc.
PRICE, $150 per acre; one third cash, balance to suit the purchaser.
' For half acre and acre tracts on the Oregon City carline and on
; the rich Reedville Prairie, call on us for full particulars and tickets
to the tracts, rnces from ?iso to 91000 per acre.
- This agreement between the owners o the en
tire tract of IRVINGTON definitely determines
that the portion of IRVINGTON that was later
platted and is now named PROSPECT PARK was
included in the original platting of IRVINGTON.
The name PROSPECT PARK was given to this
part of IRVINGTON by its owners for, the express
purpose of distinguishing it from the rest of IRV
INGTON in advertising their property for sale,
the owners wished to throw all of their energy upon
this particular part of IRVINGTON, hence the
name PROSPECT PARK.
PROSPECT PARK is the choicest part of IRV
INGTON. '
, -
-the highest part of IRVINGTON-PROS-
PECT PARK a hundred and ninety feet above
First and Washington streets.
has improvements already .installed that
have cost $250,000 a uniform plan of improve
ments carried out over the entire addition PROS
PECT PARK has the finest system of drainage,
sidewalk and street improvements in the northwest.
-a ten minute car ride from Second or Fifth
and Washington streets on the Woodlawn or Al
berta cars getting off at Knott street, walk one
block east.
-the booklet, "Prospect Park in the Making,"
THE
SHAW
i
FEAR
CO.
245 STARK STREET
a
gives a most minute description, with illustrations
of the character of improvements in PROSPECT
EARK, and should be in the hands of every person,
interested in high class residence property. ,
at our office these booklets may be had, as
well as any other information that may be desired
concerning PROSPECT PARK.
HOLLADAY'S ADDITION
rf The 'one best p1a In Portland ta buy. ; Gaocraphlcal cartar and teaet s
Blrabls rsidnc jroparty or thajclty. L v -
Seeing; Is believing. Better to an d ee 4ba nany chotca resldeooea andav
eonstniction and . tha unprorenta so in on. , ,. ,
THE OREGON :REAU ESTATE COMPANY.
s
Price 1000 and Up.
R0UNTREE&
DIAMOND
241STARK STREET
Favorable Terms
'.East Sida Office
COR. OF EAST
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Trade Build
iOURNAL WANT ADS PAY BEST
606 Board of