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THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, SATURDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 28, 1908.
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1
IILL1S FOR
With. Thirty-fire Battleships
on the Seas and Othe.
Craft An Proper Eatios
Only One Possible Biva
Remains.
Br FREDERIC . HASKEf.
CCoovright. 190$. by Frederic J. Ilaskin.
"Washington, Deo. 26. The American
; people are paying $100,000,000 a year for
the maintenance or. their prestige on
the high seas. If congress follow the
'...minilatlnii, nt tha naval authori
ties, in 10 year, or less, wa will be
es.
tia vinv twin a.a
S h.7tlhlr built and building; tw
much. We now have
40
mr hut haan nrovided for: and four
mm wa flfnV ha launched Oil U1S COn
trasalonal ways. These make a total
t Si in the next 10 yeara the nun
rar will nrobablv be brought up to
Baaed on tne cost or. niiuinamms
battleship last year, this would re-
?uiro an annual outlay o,
KattiAHhin tiiA.lntn&noe,
The navy department estimates that
there ought to be at leaat one Scout
i cruiser for every battleship, this would
mean an outlay Of 140,000.000 for con
truotlon, and perhaps J 15.000,000 a year
for maintenance. Than , tne navir ae
part men t figures that there ought to
be four torpedo boat destroyers for
very battleship. That would mean the
nr,.rnr,tlnn nt nhnut ISO In addition tO
those we now have. The cost of con-
.i,,tiii hA would be about 178
coo ooo. arm the cost of maintain
Ins- the entire 160 would be more
than tunnnnnn a. vesr. and the ansre
gate amount would be twice as great
' as the present total annual appropria
tion ror tne navy.
Only One Possible XlvaL
But a navy built after this program
would be one aooa xo loo upon. wen
' balanced it is DOSSlble for sea POW'
er to be made, It could meet and over
throw anv comer, witn tne ponniDie !
cention of Great Britain. When we
consider the thousands of miles of ex-
posed coast line, - scauerea in ever:
which that nower must defend
Amnrim wouiH have more than an even
chance of making the British lion bite
the dust of defeat a third time. It
teems that ' the American people are
' not worried about the added expense
a big navy may entail: they appear to
regard it as the cheapest insurance
gainst a foreign war that the United
States can have. Even in a rural Ala
bama district a Bankhead went down
before a Hobson when the latter, ad vc
int4 a VHMt i nflVV.
. The navy department wants four bat
tleships this year, and will probably
ant four each succeeding ; year ; for
some time t come. And it wants them
n h nf e Vlnd which can alve the
Dreadnaucht pointers in a fight, It
seems that all recent thought in naval
circles tend toward the biggest pos
sible shin. It is said that 10 battle
ships of the North Dakota type, with
a broadside fire of four 12 Inch guns,
0 1n alL would cost 1100.060,000
Twenty smaller vessels, mounting no
more than 80 big guns, would cost 6130.
000,000 to build. ; The maintenance of
the 10 North Dakotas would require
bout 110.000,000 a year, ana or tne
20 smaller ships,' at least 615,000,000.
The North Dakota fleet would require
P.000 men and zou orncers io man u.
The other would require 16,000 men
. and 400- officers.
13 tnoa Shell Xt the Bast. .
The relative efficiency of guns is a
matter on which there is a wide dif
ference of opinion. It will be recalled
that it was .e IS inch gun that told
the tale during the Spanish-American
war. Then etner navies pegan to use
tne
the II Inch gun.
ground
taking l
that It would penetrate the armor of
battleship as efficiently as a IS inch
Shell. Admiral Evans concedes the Jus
tice or mat argument, out cans at'
HELPLESS BUT
HELPS OTHERS
' We have a most unusual letter from
Woburn, Mass. roe writer must be a
very 'unusual and lovable character. She
writes from a wheeled chair. '
The name is Mrs. BenJ. B. Lea the, and
her letter comes from 74 Elm street,
; Woburn, Mass. We quote the following:
"I sent to lady in Stockton to sand
ma gome of your pamphlets as soon as
she could hear where you were located
after the quake. I gave one of them to
a lady friend here. Later meeting me
in the hall, she smilingly told me she
was coming to see me and that aha had
something to tell me. She said that a
friend of hers overheard a clerk in a
Boston drug store talking with a man
whose wife was very, sick.
"The clerk aaked what the trouble
Was. -:-
"He replied that It was chrente kid
- nr disease, and that the doctors said
that the patient could live but a short
time. The clerk .urged Fulton's Renal
Compound.'
- "The party asked: "Would you glva it
to your wifer '
rfAs quick as I could get it tn her.
"It resulted In her recovery
: "One more: A man often used to esl
at the store who appeared to be and.
One day the clerk asked him if he was
sick. He said 'Tea and that the doctors
said there was no hope for him. It was
another case of kidney disease, and the
clerk sold him the compound, . and he.
too. recovered.
"I wanted to have my friends ask for
this clerk when they call at this store,
and I wrote to a friend for his name
. and address, which I now band you
namely. Mr. Frost. Biker's drug stdre
formerly Jaynes & Co,), corner Wash
ington and Hanover streets, Boston.
''I send you this lady friend's letter
herein, but you will not publish it. I
Win trust you.
It seems
"lours respectfully,
"MRS. BENJ. B. LEATHER
that Ion
Lritthe lived . in California and knew
r.g years ago Mrs.
Iitornta nH Vn..
numbers who had recovered under Ful
ton's Renal Compound. She feels she
is neipwg nuraannjr in recommending It,
end tt appears that she has been indus
triously proclaiming It for a long time
We have good friends all over this
rointry, and this Is not the first time
that we have heard of people who
V uiwing the value of car Renal Com-l-"imd.
r making it a labor of love to
! 1 the knowiedre of tha only ens
nne known for chronle kl finer disease,
and this ool friend. In the evening: 6?
! r rfe, from the confines of , her
vffi cnair. is helping us sava bu-
t:t Uvea.
Yi i ruth Cannot be long obscured
Trw e iave stion painuy aids.
1 tr t-b d I . , .. .
! -'''HIV J. Ft XI ON.V.. CeV1na,Cal
"i i'111 o.tll Tlilrd strftt.
; ui sij.-s ivun bk eilia.
tentlon1 to the difference of efficiency
after the shell gets inside the armor.
Ha says that a 13 inch shell will hold
80 pounds of powder, while a 12 inch
missile will bold but 50. And he sets
that fighting Jaw of his In Its stern
est notch ss he contemplates what 80
pounds of high explosives would do to
an enemy's ship when safely Inside its
armor.
' Bob Ivans Biff Coal Seal.
Admiral Evans is In favor of the
government acquiring; all the' anthracite
coal beds of tha United States, and
noiawg an or the coal for the navy.
He' points out that It Is tha best coal
in ths - world, and would, glva tha
American navy a tactical advantage
over every other sea power. He esti
mates that It would, cost 618.000,000,000
to buy the coal beds, but that It would
not be necessary, to pay for them all
at once, giving hundred-year bonds for
them, "Imagine," says he, "clouds of
may oiacicness snooting up into tne
air 200 feet, and trailing to stern for
ten miles. That is a picture of the or
dinary commercial steamer running un
der a draft which is intended to hus
band a coal supply. Then Imagine a
battleship,' Its engines being; forced to
their utmost power, giving; off many
times the volume of smoke. Then add
fleet, and vou will begin to see what
an - immense signal spread ths burning
of bituminous coal gives to an enemy,
and how impossible It is to surprise
an enemy in ordinary weamer.
Plenty of Examples at Xaad.
Admiral Evans then points out how
near to disaster Dewey came as ha en
tered Manila bay. The. little McCul
lough, bard pressed to keep the pacs
set by Dewey's tieat, came Hurrying
into ths bay, spouting flames from its
funnels. Tha forts, at Corregidor Isl
and took the alarm and trained its guns
on ths little vessel. Ths rest or. tne
fleet was past tha range . of the land
guns Derore its presence waa uiscuv-
ered. He draws a lesson from fort
Arthur, and ventures the belief that ths
union's successful blockade of southern
orts was du to tne wet mat tns
lockade runners of ths southern Con-
(4nA wsra fnrred to use bituminous
coal, while the federal vessels all used
anthracite. Me argues mat on i u
satisfactory as a battleship fuel, per
niiiini nf llttiA forced draft, and tha1
tha nhumrinar nf ale-rials bv smoke from
bituminous coal might changs, victory
into defeat.
Untland's Two-Powar FrogTam.
Th.ra i thoMA who belleva that tha
time Is here when thera will be a let up
in the great Dattiesnip ouuains KUlh
test now being carried on by" the lead.
in natinm. ft n eland Is esDecially anx
ious that there should be. Tears ago
that country decided that Its continued
supremacy of the. seas mads it essen
tial that a navy, slightly larger and
stronger than those of any tther two
lowers snoul DS maanuuneu. jjim"b
v.. no mt half iincon vasts there has
been such remarkable activity in naval
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TRY TO STEADY
SHIIIGLE MliUtT
Manufacturers Will Curtail
Output for a Few
- Weeks. '
get f 2.800,000 by the sale and H.
tiuntington ig,600.ooo.
ntln
Ilun
In it ton has been on of tha
rectors of the property for several years
di-
t the special request of Hawley, who
got his first assistance as a capitalist
and 'railroad owner from the late C,
P. Huntington.
The new ownership of the Colorado
and Southern by the Hill people does not
mean any loss of cotton shipments from
Taxas and the southern states in general
to the orient through the port of San
Francisco. Hill has always - received '
a share of the business via Seattle and
will not be able to get more because of
his purchase of the Colorado & South
ern, say Southern Pacific and Santa Fs
officials. He will get more revenue for
the haul, however, by using his new
road In connection with his northern
lines. '
Ths lumber market : continues prac-
Itically unchanged, values being the same
as a week ago. Shingles are still weak
but manufacturers are norjeful that
I by curtailing the output for awhile they
can bring prices up a few notches, which
they say is altogether necessary since
tney nave been cutting; at a toss tor
several months. Some of the mills havo
I already shut down. . ..v
xne quantity or sningies manuiac
tured In this vlclnltv is not of suffi-
Iclent volume to.-affect the eastern or
middle states markets but the Washing
ton mills do. For months thev cut more
shingles ithan the demand could absorb
under brisk trade conditions and ths re.
suit was a strongly glutted market be
fore conditions were realised. But the
buyers are getting; ths benefit and they
appreciate it.
Flooring and material of that grade
lis still in strong demand and commands
good prices. Home muis are snort on
clears, one mill man refusing to con
sider rail business. on flooring, as the
mill has only enough n sight to fill
the local demand.
The . lor market continues at about
67 for red lours and 610 for vellow. The
camps will not remain closed, as long
this year as usually, it is understood.!
I because operators of the camps are said
to feel It worth while to get as many ;
logs as possible Into the river for the
I spring business, which It Is expected,
wilt pe neavy.
Rosenblatt Hotel, Tenth and Alder, Showing
Cotta Finish.
the Handsome Terra
upbuilding In other countries that Lng
land finds Itself sadly overworked.
That nation does not relish the Idea ot
mo, . i r. an nmni inn, I iikim.iii. vol
fo nrr ft nut is such a heavy tax that i
u .ometimes fears It cannot mucn
longer stand the strain. Therefore, its
good offices are always working in
favor of less naval activity on the part
of other countries.
The Submarine Peril,
nut there is a more Important reason
why there should be a let tip In bat-;
tleshlp building. The .development . of
the submarine coat makes w uncertain
when a battleship Is going to be blown
out of the water, as it approaches.
hostile shore. On the other hand, the
development of the ' flying . machine
makes It more than, possible mat, w o
i. in tha lr in harmony Witn
. ...km.rrna in tha water, a battleship
could be located to ft nicety, anp tnat
its chance of escape witn explosive;
both from above and- from oeiow womu
f nractlcallv.nil. One of the principal
objections to the submarine
machine in
LATEST CONCRETE HOUSE
. LOS ANGELES PRODUCT
East Eighteenth streets, which will cost
when completed, about $4500.
ii. ju. JJlcKson, who recently purchased
a quarter block on Hancock and East
Twenty-first streets, will build early
next year a modern home at a cost of
IOUUO.
The Norwegian Danish Methodist
church has taken out a permit for the
erection or a one story irame cnurcn
on the corner of Vancouver avenue and
bkidmore scree t to cost 17000.
E. M. Raker, formnrlv from Aatorla
has let the contract for the erection oi
a two story frame store and office
Dunning on Alberta street, between East
seventeenth ana mast mignteentn
streets. Ths completed building will
eost approximately 110,000.
H. C. Grabs has taken out a permit
for a $3000 one story frame residence
to be erected on Rant Eleventh r treat
between Thompson and Braiee streets.
John S. McLaughlin, general frelcht
and passenger agent for the Illinois
Central railway In Oregon,- has corn-
streets, are contemplating the erection
of Going street and Vancouver avenue
at a cost of 13000. An elaborate front
i and pergola la an attractive
eature of the design.
one or the handsomest or the many
new homes in the district near the head
of Love Joy street Is that of Walter A,
Holt, just completed at a cost of be-
Built From Clapboards Moulded, Out of Natural Cement U thLd
Found in Southern California Desert ; Ma
terial Said to Have Great Possibilities.
Containing ten rooms, all of which are
nlshed In eastern quarter sawed oak.
E. Rr Connlff has taken out a permit
finished
for the erection of a two story frame
dwelling on Bodney avenue between
Hoe
' streets to
cost
has been I E'er since Thomas A. Edlsin startled
soon be able to
eost so low
'.t, u h tVi flvlng machine In I ne aeciaration mat witn
? - This difficulty woUld be al" nd concrete he would soon
an attach, tws auiicuity J" " I .rt5t . modern cottaa-e at a
SSra'tWMwh Pl It within "the reach of every
KSW 8S 'Huston t!S5t building worklnV man to .own his home, efforts
;AnnrAan MttiVshins is too much llks oee maae in various, parts oi me
putttng all the egg. into on. basket ,
The Van Behind.
has its lessons. Up to
the time of the Bpaniah-American war
all naval authorities -recKonea uio
strength Of navies on tne dmw
number of guns and the tonnage or tne
ships. Little account was tasen oi me
mettle ci tne pura. w numimu "rJ 1
But that war taught tne lesson inai
both men and ships make a navy, with
men as the most Important factor. It
was then that America came to her own
as a sea power, ana irora ih u,
down to the present It has been felt that
America's naval sirengm . naa ob iw
be written as somewhat nigner tnan
guns and tonnage would show. There
are three or four powers- which have
greater -numoers or orncers arm ,?.
The English navy has an available
force of two and a half times that of
the United States. France and Ger
many have rorces nearly, twice. - mm
imn nnrm Rut. wlthaL- the Amer
ican naval authorities think they have
enough men to have one for every re-
ronslble Place wnen it comes to - a
ght,
What the Havy Has Cost.
tha harlnnlns? of the "new"
navy In 188S when Its A, B, C and D,
tha Atlanta, the Boston, ths Chicago
ami tha Dnlnhln wereauthorlzed down
to the present time, tne unitea oiaies
has soent less than four hunrded mil
linn dollars in building un tne navy;
but it has spent more than twice that
murh In ma.lntalnlng It. According to
figures of the cost of maintenance, the
recommendations of the secretary of
the nary for 4 battleships, 4 scout
cruisers, 10 destroyers, 4 submarines,
8 colliers, l repair snip ana z mine lay
ing ships will Involve an added annual
xnenditure of more than six million
dollars. It Is estimated that the life
of a battleship is 20 years. One bat
tleship authorized means a total out
lay of some - twenty-five million dol
lars from the time or its authorization
to the time of .its relegation to the
Junk heap.
Wools aUm a Blow Builder.
One of the things that has serious-
lv bothered American naval experts is
the lnabality to compete with foreign
shipyards In the rapidity of constructing
oattiesnip. it i to taae ti montns
build the Florida and it-will sur
prise -everybody If the contractors get
finished by that time. The best
ever done in America was when the
Vermont was completed in 8 years,
months and 18 days. - On the other hand
England turned out the Bellerophon In
a little less than two years, and the
Germans will complete the Nassau in
less- than two years and a half. The
average period of construction in the
United States has been about . four
yesrs..-.- .
as to rignting qualities oi tne Amer
can battleship,, despite all statements
that have been made, the best Eng
lish, German and French naval authori
ties admit that, considering vessels of
the same period. . the American ; shins
have nothing to lose when compared
with those' of other nations. Comparing
the Indiana or the Oregon with tha
Dreadnought is no fairer te the Amer
ican navy tnan it wouia Be , fair to
iigland to compare the first 20 bat-
esmps or Tne r.n
own North Dakota.
navy with our
ANN1TERSAEY OF
ALBANY PIONEERS
..- e .-.. ., 1
SpeeUl Dispatch t Tt 3oeraa.t
Albany,, Or., Deo.- 2.Ths fiftieth
wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
F. Simpson was celebrated yesterday.
The Simpsons are among Albany's pio
neer citizens and their children made
e event one to be remembered.
Mr. Simpson was born in Kentnr.Vv
and crossed - the plains In 1850. Mrs.
Simpson, then Miss Nanney, crossed In
xney were married m 1IS8 and
r the parents of 10 children, af whom
four aro living. Mr. Simpson is a prom-
tmiauvr m vos aaasons ana Odd
get up a plan of cheap house
construction that would eclipse or nt
least eaual the Kdison nlan.
The latest of these building; enter-
f irises comes from Los Angeles, where
t is proposed to utilize natural cement
deposits, which have been unearthed in
San Bernardino county, Southern Cali
fornia, This deposit has been found to
contain 76 per cent silica, 14 ? per cent
alumina, 1.26 per cent ferrlo oxide and
?.60 per cent lime. Its silica ndalum
na content readily makes It equal to
concrete in fire resistance, and the ab
sence of objectionable elements removes
the danger of slacking under contact
with water.
By the application of a small amount,
of cement. It la possible to turn out
building stone In any shape desired,
which haa the same consistency as con
crete, taking a higher polish than ordi
nary stone and capable of being reduced
to art columns, ornamental bases, pillars
and Interior art work.
But the most important feature of the
discovery Is the fact that weather board
ing, as light as lumber, far cheaper, and
as readily applied to building, . can be
turned out from this material.
Under Edison's plan of building, he
elalms to be able to place his molds and
Sumner and Emerson
13000.
C. M. Polav has let the " contract for
nine room concrete cottage in a two story rrams aweiimv to he erect
urs. It Is claimed bv concrete led on the corner of East Sixth and
experts tnat ths amount of air and mois-1 Alnsworth streets. The Improvement
iuio acvumpunying sucn rapia pouring i win cost ftouu.
Without tamDlnsr. prevents a nerf eot I Slnnott A Hlnnott. owners of a nnar.
solidification of the mass, and when the iter block at East Main and East Water
molds are removed an unsightly porous street, are contemplating the erection
wh i iui, i- - I or a warenouse on tne property, con
ITeats mads on the desert nanostts I tranttnn to tiaa-fn In tha aarlv imlnt
show that it is easily ground and mold-I While no definite conclusion baa bean
ea into ooara torm, ootn straignt anniarrlvea at as to tne height or the pro-
matched, permitting rapid drying, and I posed structure it is probable that t
furnishing a nroduct rtiemtalinc cut will hn & fnnr itnrv. rnfnnMl ntnoni
building stone. I structure, that will eost between. $88,-
iii u f ue i wunirr, wnerv mv dot i- i uud ann au.uuD. .
ame house is used extensively, it 'is I Construction work will begin next
planned to sddIv the stone board on the I wk an tha naw v.tLnt fiiifn Amnnt tnr tha
same principle, using the frame of wood- Southern Paclfto railway, to be erected
wors:, ano snainar in tne Doaras in tne on Kast First - and East Morrison
same manner that lumber Is now being; streets. The contract has been awarded
used. .Those who have experimented to. Robert Wakefield, who Is now as-
with the material claim It Is possible to snblinsr building materials on the site.
construct a modern cottage with an ex- Under the contract the building la to
tci i v us, tuo siuvvvui vvnrouoi 11VM WHO
noara witn an interior or concrete, n de
sired, the stone acting as an outer wall
and' the concrete readily adhering, thus
makina- the entire mass solid. In this
regard, ornamental exteriors can be ap
plied by both cement and screw fasten
ings. - . i;-;-vv'-'-. v -
Now that the laboratorv tests have
proved successful, it Is planned to erect
be completed by April 10.
WANDERED SIX YEARS
WITH MEMORY BLANK
iftnM1 Tlleinatf)! ti fnis, Aiirmstl V
Oakland, CaL, Ic. 36. Harry
TWELVE NEW APARTMENT
HOUSES FOR DECEMBER
Permits Issued for, Erection ot Dozen Structures Each
Costing More Than $10,000 Building ; Opera
tions of the . Current Month Are Heavy.
Up te ths close of business hours
Thursday afternoon, December 24, per
mits for It apartment houses and flats.
eaoh. valued at more than 110,000, had
been Issued since the first- of the
month.
The largest of these buildings is a
four story frame apartment house un
der construction t Park and Taylor
streets by Emit Plttalkauv The etruc
tare Is to coat approximately (40,000
and will 'be up to date, both In archl
tectural oesign ana interior - aiTange
ment. - ' -.. -
Contraotors Stokes A Zellar -have be
arun the erection of a three story frame
apartment nouse on jsooiiomeiy Btreet,
between- Sixteenth and Seventeenth
streets for R. V, Jones; 126.000 being;
the estimated cost of the Improvement.
T. O. Sands, the contractor, is Build
ing a three story frame apartment house
for himself on Marshall street, between
Nineteenth end Twentieth . streets, to
cost about 123,500. ,
; On the east side or renin street, be
tween Harrison and Hall. I. A. Peters
has begun the erection of a three story
combination brirk and frame apartment
house to cost $22,600.
A four story apartment house of
f rams construction is being erected by
H. X Camp on Lovejoy street, between
Twenty-first and Twenty-second streets.
The1 estimated cost of the Improvement
is 827.800. - . - - .- - "
W. D. oarrett nas proiten ground ror
fonr story frame apartment house on
' COKSTTstrnO STATISTTOS.
Prove that a neglected cold or cough
mts the lungs in so bad a condition
hat ' consumption germs find a fertile
field for fastening on one. Stop the
cougn just as soon. as it appears witn
Ballard's Horehound SvniD. Boothaa
the torn and Inflamed tissues and
makes you wall acaln. Sold by Bkidmore
Drug Co. . - .. .. .
.trip, 1 nf thnH nniiHi at a snft faIW,MA a a tx w ur...i i li
below that of surfaced lumber, and com- East Twenty-third street, has cleared
pletely revolutionize the erection of the mystery of his -disappearance six
cheap homes. years ago. Loss of memory resulting
If the material proves the , success from an attack of diphtheria, was the
claimed for it, a complete revolution In direct cause of his leaving- home, and
the lumber trade wiU be worked. he is now unable to trace back his ac
tions to within six months after leaving
Oakland. A bicycle and a vest found
under the Webster street bridge had
given rise to the belief that he had been
drowned. He was 1 years old at the
time. . - : . - v-. ..
Mrs. Wasenet on the recelnt of a tel
egram from the boy's uncle at Sandusky,
unio, lett ior tne east ana returned
with her son. He has taken un work
under his father, who is ths manager
oi tne oiumDia i company or isan
Drancisoo. .
CALIF0RNIANS TO GET
. SIX C. & S. MILLIONS
(Soeelal Wiroatrh to The Jmirntl.l
San Francisco, Dec. 28. The sale of
the Colorado ft southern railroad to the
I Hill Interests by Edwin Hawley ami
! his associates means that 86.000.ona
of the purchase price of $18,000,000- will
go to some prominent uaiirornians. H
l Hi. Huntington
MliiJ
I
iron
LULL LL LLL1
E
rm
Durable
Sanitary
Best for the Abutting
Property Owner
Because It Is
Noiseless
Clean
Best for the Horse
Because It Is
Resilient and Non-Slippery
The Cost of the Pavement Never Exceeds $2.25 in
the Teaming ZaimHs.
The Cost of Excavation and Cement Work is the
Prevailing Price at Time of Letting k
I7arrai CoislrsieSloii
Coot
PURITY !
"Tha paint thai watrs.
"Gutrintted to gvv atisfictloru"
PULL MEASURE
66
199
lay flnl fail
"Manufactured on the Padfic Coast"
"Savea 20o per gallon on freight"
"Ask your .dealer for color cards and prices."
"If he can't supply you, write us."
FISHER, THORSEN & CO.
Paint Manufacturers and Jobber.
Portland. Oregon.
Commsrclal street, between Stanton and
Morris. The Improvement Is being made
for J. Lanagan and will cost In ths ioeiates; so also are memcers or the
oa or
Crocker
Crocker.
u.
is one of Hawley's
.family, particularly
dtutr
it is saia tne crockers
orge
will
neighborhood of tiE.OOo.
J. R. Hale is eracrtaa- foe ' ritmaalf
four story frame apartment house on
r ii en iirML Detween uiay ana Market,
mi av cost ox tv'.ouu. .
Contractors &tokes & Zellar have Vn
der construction a . three story, six
series, crams riat on East conch street,
between Grand avenue and East Sixth
streets. The building will cost, when
completed, about 1 10.000, and Is ths
properiy or tne Duiiders.
Contractor P. C. Strelgel Is building
for Jacob Hahn a two story frame flat
on the corner of Seventh and Clifford
streets xo cost- fiu.uuu. . ,
On the east side of the Ring- street
extension, lust off Washint-tnn atrat n
A. Anderson is completing a three story inely, it la not claimed tha. Syrup of Fin
and basement apartment house to. cost VJL ,. .1 ""u" w 'S
1Si?n? i- -' and Ehxir of Senna, ia the only remedy of
William Reldt has let the contract , . -- . -
for the erection of two two story frame known value, but one of many reasons
Street. UtweVarandusdt JT . t ot personal and family
Diim Birwii. i i nut DUlloinga Will DS l .T.t;vpa t( ih rid that. It
thoroughly modern and will cost be-1 xalIve" 1 9 iac tnat it cleanses,
Burnett'ha. ?&&11VM W nd the internal organs
The Roberts Construction company ' Is I on which it acts without any debilitating
building a two story frame flat on Un-1 ' , . t f. . .
ion avenue, Deiween wetaier and Halsey I aiver eoecrsana wimouxnavina; to increase
ss4 Matsi as aTa HM "O u,k. , ma. ii i I a v
Troth and
Quality
appeal to the Well-informed in every
walk of life and are essential to permanent
success and creditable standing. Accor-
the quantity from time to time.
It acta pleasantly and naturally and
truly as a laxative, and its component
parts are known to and approved by
physicians, as It is free from all objection-
coiniove'H-'-buUdln :- bl9 uhstances. To get ita beneficial
On Unipn avenue, between ; Ivy and effects always purchase the trnuine
Cook streets, H. F. Krelger is building ; . 5! "
a iwoi story store ana list building to 1 manuiaciurea py vauiorma t ig ayrup
John Duthte has taken out a, permit olu7' torfM by aU leading drug
for a- two storv flat to ba rrttA n. I . , - -7"
Belmont, btwtn .ast Seventeenth and I SllLa
will cost 18000.
C. Missinger Is having- erected two two
story frame flats on East Thirteenth
street between Weidler and Ttrnariw.v
The structures are to cost (6000 and are
being erected by N. a. Patterson.
On Belmont, between East- Twenty
Ecvrnin una nasi i weniy-eigntn Streets,
U. IX Garretris building for Mrs. Watts
Lest You Forget
, Again we saymake this headquarters
for you hardware buying; and seeqrs
t a Quality of materials that equal money
elsewhere can't approach.
' Proof Is In the seeing.
AVERY&CO.
4 Third St., Bet. Pine & Ash
John A. Melton
CASPinrTEB aits Btxru)
Factory and Offleo ISC Second
street, near Main.
Phones: Main 17IT; A-17IT
Office and Store fixtures built
and remodeled, .
Altering and repairing
houses.
Shot, ses and Countars built
CASTINGS
. FOR MACHINE AND STRUCTURAL WORK
THE INDEPENDENT FOUNDRY CO.
23d and York Streets Phones Main 2323, A4221
Repair Work Given Prompt Attention- rounders. Machinists and Boilermakers.
Building sad Structural Work.
PHOENIX IRON WORKS
. BMGIMtBRS
Office and Works
Hawthorne Avetine aad East
. TUrd Street.
Pkone Sast It.
HOLLADAV'S ADDITION
1 The ens best Discs In Portland tft buv. Oeoa-ranhtat mil, mnA
strable residence property of the city.
Seeing Is believing. Better ge end see the many choice residences undes
construction And the Improvements going on.
THE OREGON REAL; ESTATE COMPANY
C54 GSA1TD ATE,. ,1 .-' J?C3TLAK. 02T1.-- 1