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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1910)
a , '..3 THE -OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. WEDNESDAY EVENING, MARCH 23,-1910. ' JOURNAL PICTURES - r . . IMPORTANT NOTICE A second shipment of Journal Ticturei arrived last Friday, and on Saturday and Monday The Journal office was visited 'by several " thousand people who had been holding their coupons, awaiting the arrival ot the pictures. Late Monday afternoon, the second consignment became entirely exhausted and it will now be necessary tor those still holding coupons to retain them until the arrival of the third shipment, which is now eriroute by fast freight. ' The Journal asks its friends to he patient. Every reader who has collected the coupons will be supplied just as soon as possible Arrangements have been made to fill the hundreds of mail orders from the next consignment. DEMONSTRATE TO 1 000 FARMERS Freezing Weather and Bad Roads Do Not Keep Peo ple From Seeing Train. did not ear to wear them. Sha dta covered that there waa a hot in bet stocking. She haa offered reward of lioo for the return or the ring. s - MEW REACH STAGE0F15FEET Rise of 1.4 Feet in 24 Hours : at Eugene; Pleasant Weather Predicted. siamiy circulate wirnin. i nat m mi Ferffrt success In my work Is onl to be obtained hy use of the horizontal planes," said Mr. Bwett. "The heating problem Is simple. I need but he ship to hoM my hand on the Inner wall 10 ecerndh, to know that the lfmpfrlur la not too (rest. I una no thermome ter " Shrimp, aeparaaua and peas had been piaord on the. slides. The shrimps were simply nhrlvellnir up. Hut other shrimps, dried lonr ago. needed but to be put In water to fill out again to their original tr. and freshness. ('ahbaaes had been dried, hut when moistened th heads swelled out to their first six and greenness. Pearlies, rher rles, raspberries, loganberries and, oth er mul fruits had all been subjected to the same lnfluenoe and all had been affected alike. Eg-yptiane Did Plxst Drying-. "The Kgyplans," said the Inventor. "preserved food, thinking some time the mummies would come back to life and be hungry. That was their only object. Then their secret was lost, burled away In the pyramids. I have found It again. But the twentieth century will seek to develop the commercial possibilities of the discovery. I, for Instance, can use the thousands of tons of cherries that are lost every year by splitting by making a cherry raisin that will excel he gre.pe raisin. I can put up shrimps In the same way, or for that matter, any other kind or nesn or vegetable Rains In this aeetlon which caused light rise to the Willamette rTver above thfa point have now ceased, according : to the report from the weather office, and from the present Indications there la ho danger that the river here will be materially affected by them. Back water from the Columbia la not caua ng the Willamette to rise as fast aa It was at first thought and it Is now pre dicted that It will not reach a stars of It feet before Saturday. The official weather report says: The river at Portland will reach a tags of 14.0 feet Thursday, 14.5 Friday and It feet Saturday." The Willamette river above Portland rose somewhat by reason of the heavy rain In the valley yesterday, the great eat rise being at Eugene, where It came up 1.4 feet in 24 hours. This will not affect the river here, however, unless there should be more heavy rains, which are not looked for now. on the con trary, fair weather Is predicted for to night Thursday will be cooler. District Forecaster Beals says that there is a probability that there will be heavy frosts In the exposed parts of the district tonight. He says: "The Indica tions are for generally fair weather in this district tonight and T hursday, with lower temperatures tonight In Idaho. There Is a likelihood of heavy frosts oc curring tonight at exposed places In this district, warnings for "which, If j necessary, will be lasued to those Inter Mted at about o'clock thla evening.' (Ipertnl. riUiMtrh to The Jourfc.t.) IS Grande Or., March 23. A light snowfall marked the demon stration train's entry Into the (Jrsnde Ronde valley this morn ing. The mercury dropped to the freez ing point and the chickens and other passengers shivered. But It was not two chilly for I'lilou's citizens. TOO of whom welcomed the college profesnors ami gullied new knowledge from the tmln's elaborate exhibits and equipment. Union's band played. Milking Machine Interests. One thousand persons Inspected the train at l,a Grande, which wan reached at noon. A remarkable fentur of the tour la the Intense. Intercut of the farm ers. Although the roads In eastern Ore gon are In bad condition, wheat raisers Slid stockmen compose the major part of the traln'B audience. Tb" chief attrac tion Fcems to be the milking machine. Nine out of ten persons who visit the train have never before seen cows milked by a machine. Well, it doea the trick." Is the com mon expression. At Morlh- Powder Tuesday night the members of the demonstration train party were guests of the Karmera Union which had dinner served at Young's hotel. At Klgln this evening the Com mercial club will be the host. The many courteales that are being extended the demonstration train party J on this trip are taken by Dr. Withy- combe as a certain Indication that east ern Oregon now fully appreciates the effort to uplift of the O. R. & S. com pany. HAMMOND CITIZENS ' REPUDIATE MAYOR: (flpecli! Dispatch te .Tb Joaraal.) Fort Stevens, Or., March 31. The re cent act of Hammond's cJiief executive In forwarding a communication to the department commander. General Maus, requesting that cltlxena of Hammond should not he permitted to purchase tickets entitling them to admission to a picture show held trl-weekly In the post gymnasium at Fort Stevena, Tiaa led to a counter request In the shape of a pe tition niened by practically all of the citizens of Hammond stating that auch Is neither their desire, nor waa such an unwarranted acj either encouraged or countenanced by them; that they desire aoove an to patronize and encourage i Ntich pleasant and commendable forma of amusement. Thla petition haa been forwarded to the commanding officer at Fort Stevens. THE ADVANTAGES Of buying in a district where-the im-' ; provements are in are self-evident. Property which has every. hidi-class improvement and a high building restriction is positive. People do not hesitate to,'j erect fine homes in a district of this character, for they know that'they are pro tected against cheap shacks and stores being erected next to them and ruining the value of theproperty as a high-class residence district for aliVtime It is the resi dence district with all improvements and a good building restriction where the fine homes are built, and it is;this class of property which advances the steadiest, for good homes create high values. -'' i , ': . ' THE ECONOMY "The process Is not expensive, th work is quickly done, and the product keep Indefinitely. A reasonable degree of dryness only la necessary'. I can seaaon timber In a few hours bette than It can be aeasoned In yeara. It Is big proposition. It will, developed have a revolutionary effect on the can nlng industry." MAJOR SLOCUH (Continued from Page One.) REGIT If! MR (Continued from Pae One.) ala,- moistened, resumed original fresh ness and color, and the withered buds burst Into bloom. Corn on the cob, of last year, had been dried Into a third tta former aire; then was reatored by merely being placed in water over night, -ao mat It not only looked but tasted rreah. Experimenting is Tears. Mr. Bwett Is a young man, evidently acquainted with toll. He beara no mark of the fanatic, nor doea he claim to hve discovered the secret of perpetual youtn, or anytning approaching It. "But" he aaid, "I have been experi menting 15 years, seeking for the ele ment which, successfully applied, kept aisintegrauon rrom affecting food prod uc.ta Several yeara ago by chance I happened upon the effects. So, some times the things I turned out would keVp indefinitely; sometimes they aoured. I did not, know the cause. "It la that cause which I have now discovered. It is an element that per meates the air. A child may apply It to Jthe product which Is to be preserved when the secret is learned." The Inventor says that so far as a comparison is possible, lie has succeed ed In securing "suspended animation" In ' ,the products he preserves. The term might better be "suspended disin tegration." T Apparatus Queer. Ho operates a queer looking appara tus. A fire burns In both ends of the oblong case- Horizontal screened slides bear the preserving 'product. Air con- wound but a superficial examination re vealed no other lnjurlear General Bell and Mra. Slocum were eeated in the tonneau of the machine, from which they were hurled by the Impact of the trolley car. Chauffeur Ward waa not Injured. He, with the motorman and conductor of the car, was arrested. Major Slocum la a. nephew of Mra. Russell Sage. As far aa could be learned from the conflicting storiea of witnesses of the fatal accident, the chauffeur was at tempting to croea the trolley tracka ahead of the car. This could not be definitely ascertained, but the major ity of witnesses believe that the driver of the automobile attempted to dash over the tracks. The car struck the machine toward the rear of the tonneau, and It ia be lieved Mrs. Slocum received her fatal Injuries when 'the car struck, although her body waa thrown several yards. At Fort Meyer general hospital It was aid thla afternoon that General Bell was painfully but not seriously Injured. Besides a slash over the head he sus tained bruises on the back and chest. There were no indications of Internal injuries. Pasadena, Cel., March 33. Major 8. It. H. Slocum, U. S. A., was told today by the United Press of the death of hla elster-ln-law, Mra. H. J. Slocum, who was killed in an automobile accident In Washington. Major Slocum is In Pasadena with his aunt, Mrs. Russell Sage. He obtained a leave or abaence rrom the American embassy In St. Petersburg, where he Is military attache, to accompany Mrs. Sage to the Pacific coast Slocum would not state definitely whether the affair would make any changes In Mrs. Sage's plans. The widow of the financier, with her neph ew, had planned to start for Washing ton and New York next Friday. It waa possible. Slocum admitted, that they might leave here tomorrow. Elmer Ray's Hard Luck. ISpeclil niapntrh ti Th Jmirnnl.) Eugene, Or., March 23. Hardlv had Elmer Ray, convicted of obtaining money by false pretenses, been sent enced to two years in the state penf tentlary by Judxe Harris yesterday, when hla wife. Sadie Ray, filed a suit In the ciroult court for divorce and for the restoration of her maiden name, Hadle Thornthwalte. They were mar ried at Marcola, Lane county, on March 18, 1909, and on March 18, 1910. their wedding anlveraary, the huaband was convicted. The ground upon which Mrs. Ray seeks a legal separation la that he has been aentenced to the penitentiary for a felony. i WORK TO BEGIN ON GOVERNMENT JETTY (Kpei'UI niipatrb to Tb Joarnal.) Fort Stevens, Or., March 23. Infor mation from reliable sources Indicate that rock hauling for the government Jetty at the mouth of the Columbia river will be resumed on or before the tenth of May. The storms of the massing winter failed to damage the Jetty materially, this result being attributed to the ex cellent Judgment dlanlaved bw-En:4neer najmAIl and hla assistants In planning a aystem or reinforcing pilings. It Is generally conceded that greater prog ress will be made this season toward final completion of thla work than In any previous year. GREATEST OF AVIATION MEETS AT RHEIMS Of purchasing In a residence 'district of this character is readily seen. In buying in a dis trict where there are no buildiner restrictions and few, if any, improvements, low first cost is no inducement. To begin with, the improvements will come eventually and will have to be paid for but in the mean time lack of a building restriction is responsible for the erection of cheap shacks, stores, garages, ete., etc.. which forever ruin the district as a high-class residence section hence the economy of purchasing in a highly improved and highly re stricted section. (Halted Preti Lewtd wire.) Rhelms, France, March 23. According to those promoting the second aviation meet at Rhelms, which Is acheduled for July, the meeting will be on a larger scale than any previously held. Forty thousand dollars In prises will be of fered. In consequence It la expected that the foremost aviators of the world will participate. The meeting is to be held on Bethany field, where the great meet of laat year was staged. The great feature this year will be the elimination trials for the International aviation trophy. The meet will begin July 3 and conclude July 10. I Want Hamilton at Hoquiam. (Special ninpatch to Th Journal. I Aberdeen, Wash.. March 23. R. L. Philbrlck of Tloqulam ia endeavoring to secure Aviator Hamilton to make flights at Hoquiam and Aberdeen April 2 and 3. The commercial clubs of Aberdeen and Hoquiam will work to secure Hamil ton's appearance on these dates. Hole In Stocking; Loses Rings. (BoeeUl Dispatch to Tb Journal. North Yakima, Wash., March 23. Mrs. Olive Penman, when she returned to her rooms Monday, discovered that 6he had lost four valuable diamond rings from her stocking, where she was n the habit of carrying them when she Forest Grove Couple Wed. (Special Dispatch.- to The Joarnal.l Forest Grove, Or., March 23. Ola Mae ' Parr and Paul E. Sexton were married Monday in thla city. Mr. and Mra. Sex ton nave resided in tnis city for a number of years and are popular with the younger society aet. They will make their home at Missoula, Mont., where Mr. Sexton drew a claim at the recent land drawing. The Only Question Is Which Section and the Answer Is Easy If You Desire a Home Site You Want the One With Every Improvement And That Is r 1 wills Good Roads Meeting for Hood. (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) Hood River, Or., March Zi. The Grange bodies of Hood River are plan ning a good road's campaign In the val ley. The officers of the Pine Grove Grange have Invited Judge Webster of Portland and Judge Derby of Hood i River rnnntv tn aridrena th etHma s,n ' the subject "HI The Addition with Character There can be only ONE BEST, and that is Laurelhurst. There is no argument on this point, for Laurelhurst will have improvements which can be found in no other residence section of Portland., ft is from 5 to 10 minutes closer to the busi ness and shopping district of the city than other residence additions now on sale, and on two carlines. And all of the improvements of Laurelhurst are being made now and will be finished by August 15. These improvements include asphalt streets 28 to 48 feet wide, 6-foot cement walks, 9-foot parking strips, handsome cluster lights, shade trees from 15 to 20 feet high, water, sewer and gas mains, with laterals running from each main to below the curb in front of each lot. L S DRIVEN THROUGH Arrow COLLARS having flexible bending points DO NOT CRACK 1 5c eocA, 2 for 25c CSuett, Peabody ft Co., Maker ARROW CUFFS, 25 cents a Pair If G TO MEND BACK ""-V PRICE, 25 CTS. , W' r " VUSf XW0 Coughs, Colda, Voufcfc. Uoaraeowa, eto. Jt to aaie and aura,' F. M. Morgan, tie Inspector for the O. R. & N. at Boring, can boast, of being the only man In Oregon who ever had a job of carpenter work done on his leg. Now the nails are working themselves loose from the bones of his limb, like long used nails from the Bide of a building. The sufferer will come to Portland within a. day or so and allow a modern surgeon to see What can be done to remedy the carpentry of the Colorado sawbones. Years ago, while in Colorado, Mr. Morgan had the misfortune to break his leg. The doctor who attended him took some common cut nails and some wire and spliced the bones together a good deal like a small boy would a hoe handle. The wound healed and though the injured Ipr- was shorter than the other, it pave its owner no trouble un til recently. Durlns all of this time, however, Mr. Morgan could take hold of his foot and twlut his leg around as though there was an extra Joint at the place. where the break had been. Recently the old break began to trouble him and he con sulted a surgeon. The doctor made a slight incision and pulled out one of the nails, it having worked loose from where It hail been driven through the bone. The other nail Is also loose. Mr. Morgan Is over 60 years of age, which makes the trouble Berlous. He will come to Portland for treatment to. day or tomorrow. REMEMBER APH SI Prices of Lots in Plat 2 of Laurelhurst Advance on That Date. Call at our office or phone us what day and hour you and your family would like to go out to Laurelhurst, and we will be pleased to have our auto call and take you out to the property. Deal with any of our authorized brokers if you prefer. TTTHOBZZES BSOXZBSl Charles X. Henry Oo. Wakefield, Fries fc Co. Oeorgra X. Sohalk. K. P. Falmer.Jonea Oo. Holmes tr Menefee. Mall ft Ton Borstal, afaokle fc Kountree. &. T. Bryan ft Co. Prlck-Dodds Co. Kuff-Klelnsorge X,and Co. Dubois ft Crockett Bealty CD. Chaola ft Herlow. Haaa ft Blngler. UAT.TM AaxVOX, A. XT. KOOKXS, 1-8 BUSH-BBETMAJT BLOCK i zuazirz aoeitct, kaoladbt ' " BBTtnC&TH 4XBA2TY AOEITCT, A. T. TABS (WALLA WALU AOBWOTA W. C. XOEHHE, DBtTlIEILIi- I El ft ENMIS 522-526 Corbett Building Phones Main 1503, A 1515 Comfort Rodcer 425 This cut cannot show the beauty of this full quarter-sawed oak, hand polished or wax fin ished, solid saddle seat and solid low back Rocker. It's the latest design and thoroughly well made, and a splendid value at our Low Rent Price, $4.25. Easy paymentSf yt-s ,ut one of the large assortments we are showing at astoundingly low prices. The same design in Circassian walnut and fumed oak; also chairs to match. arm Furniture 20 to 25 Per Cent Less On account of our Low Rent and Buying Big for our Three Stores. . CREDIT CONFIDENTIAL Our Credit Customers Are Never Known Be yond Our Store. Try this credit plan it's easy, pleasant, dignified and satisfactory. FIRST TOOTH ARID ?w Church tor Eugene. Eusene. Or.. March 23. The Methodist church of this city has Just made the purchase of two lots on South Willam ette street near ' Twelfth from J. T Rowland and H. Hadley on which to erect a handsome new house of worship to rost between 175.000 and $100,000 This will be the costliest church edifice In the citv. unlm h r'V,io... i neciaes to exDenrt mnr. n.in t-. ni,, ... the erection of their proposed new' build lug, that being the flfure.decided upon. m s jm t i mm . 360y0 Cast Morrison St. Three Stores, Portland, St. Johns and Vancouver. ' TIE LAST I It was a good starts little seed pearlfollowed by a rosy mouth filled with white beauties. Then carelessness, inattention and neglect only one decayed, yellow tooth left. Nature Gives, the Start, We Prevent the Finish As an Inducement We Make These SPECIAL PRICES FULL SET THAT FIT : $5.00 BRIDGE TEETH, 22k 83.50 GOLD CROWNS, 22k. r ,.83.50 GOLD FILLINGS ,.. 81.00 SILVER FILLINGS f..50 LET US CARE for YOUR TEETH BEFORE IT'S TOO LATEj EXAMINATIONS FREE ELECTROPAINLESS DE1VTISTS 303 WASHINGTON STREET, CORNER FIFTH , ixrosa Prom the parkin. XotellOJJY ASSISTANT t ATTEITDAjrcs.' .Offioa Open Urania s ana Sundays. 4