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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1911)
J, J,").,'. V:' V ;'; v .1 DAILY JOURNAt, PORTLAND;! WEDNESDAY I EVENING, :MAvVltlWLi" r-. THE OREGON - H ss t 11? r OUTSIDE LIMITS ! Hood River Council Listens to r Objections of Suscepti- ble Noses. i Bp1al niapatch to Ths Jonril. Hood River, Or.. May 17. The Hood I River Spray Manufacturing company aakfd the city council for a permit to ' ' build a spray factory southwest of the J business section of the city, but In view of the filing of objection to the odor of the plant, tho city council refused to , grant the permit. The nltrht marshal, who now receives I t60 per month, asked a raise nnd the matter was referred to a committee. The ' Hood River heights section will have a marshal iurlnn the strawberry eeason. , Councilman 8. C. Smith resigned as he intends to leave the city. Third street, one of the main streets i In the city, was ordered graded on pen. : Uon of the property owners. Hood River Business Change. ni.n.pK in Tl Journal.) I Hood River, Or.. May 13. Smith ? Bros., who have been conducting a gro- rv atnra in Hood River. have sold their Interest to 11 U Hugglna, who . was formerly In the dry goods business , here. flyis1e T "A terrible Jungle tiger that stealthily teals upon and rends hlr victim is not :t ma much to be dreaded as the Portland t house fly." said Dr. Calvin S. White. i aiat health officer, sbeaklng in' the ,1 Medical building auditorium last night Shown upon a screen, the Jaws and hairy legs of the fly looked much more i formidable than the fangs and claws of i ih. tir. Dr. White said that people t would engage in nightmares and other J unpleasant tnings ii iney muugiu , wild beast had escaped even from a H circus, but they let flies buxi around ! the food or the baby's bottle, having i no concern for the fact that the same .1 files mlarht lust hav come from the 1 eoneumntlve or Victim of typhoid. The fly, said DV. White and he lllus- f trated each assertion with views is a J walking and flying arsenal of germs, j If the odor attracts he alights on any i substance, no matter how repulsive or 1-diseased; there he feeds, taking germs i Into his system, gathering them upon 1 his legs, catching them upon his wings, t and then spreading them In places J where the germs grow and multiply and i deal death 1 Food exposed for sale, said Dr. I 'White, should be kept covered away from flies. A. law prohibiting access f bv flies to food should be rigidly an. t forced. Flies should be killed by any f one of a number of simple means. Ths 'i maces where they breed should be de ! atroyed. Last night's meeting was for the public. It was held under the auspices of the Consumers' league. The audlto- rlum was crowded. The purs food committee of the Consumers' league announced this morning tlfat arran ga rments would be made to give the lec- i- ture in every school auditorium. In the churches and at other placej whers the : people gather. Fl LAKES IS SUGGESTION on AN SALMON OR KLAMATH .... v'. Srcia1 Din natch to The Journal.) P Keno. Or., May 17. Commerlcal Sal omon flshina- on the Klamath lakes is a Dossibllity that may follow establish- . t meat of ajsalmon hatchery on the Klam- atji tver, If "It "can" be demonstrated that enough salmon come up the Klam- ath to make suoh a hatchery a suocess. - f- There have been few salmon In the -. lakes because the obstructions In Klam- i ath "river" kept them from getting up. "tThe proposed hatchery would be below - T this, place, .vv For years a rock dam has been main- f talned below Keno for sawmill purposes, r and -this has greatly obstructed free access of salmon In their attempts to a reach the waters above. This has been 4 partially alleviated by the construction .of a fish ladder over the dam, but Mt is said not to allow the salmon to ; "climb over In large quantities. C F. Stone, a Klamath county mem- ber of the new fish and game commls & slon, suggests that the Klamath Rod ' and Gun club take the salmon part of 1 the fish Industry up and ascertain whether or not enough of these com- 7'merclal fish would come to these waters to make It worth while to establish a salmon hatchery. t with the lakes ana Klamath river full of salmon, canneries would be es- l tabllshed. Ifire loss at asylum i SATURDAY NIGHT, $11,676 . .L Salem Rnnau of Th Jmimnl 1 , Salem. Or., May 17. Official estl- mate of the Ions by fire to wards 16, ' 17 and 18 of the building for female pa. tlents at the state asylum for the ln- icane last Saturday night were given - out by State Architect W. C. Knighton -yesterday afternoon as follows: Btilld v. Ing, 36294.33; contents, 35382.20; total. T U,67S.T8. 1 . ' - p 'Are you looking for a farm or a piece , li of acreage? If so, see today's classified ' f columns and you will be able to make a choice selection. t- , - Effective Home Remedy f for Tuberculosis ' - It "is a serious matter when the lungs "ere affected. A trip away or to a sana ,. torlumw expensive and involves separa tion from home. Kckman's. Alterative la errective no leaving home necessary. . i'31 S. Atlantlo ave., Haddonfleld, N. J. .,,- .Gentlemen: 'In the fall of 1905, 1 1 , contracted a very severe -cold which set- t ilea on my luags. i-mj pnysician then told trie I mast go to California at once. fieine- advised to take Eukman'a Altera.. f tlve. I stayed at home and commenced the lt week In October. The first week s In January, 1806. I resumed work, fully , since my cure has been effected i. 'Signed! ' W.' M. TAT "g Fuller deUUs f-above case c ecieov TATEM. on jre. J euest. JvCKman s juteranve . is for Bronchi- tls. Asthma. Hay Fever. Throat and o l4inr Affections. For sale 'by the itwi yruM and other leading rug- ,..imM. ask ior oooaiet or curea cases, " mn.'r. Tf1 J FCkman Laboratory. Phit- ? acu'iFi.ja, ra tor addiUona evidence. Pneumatic Water Lift at Bialock, Or., Said to Raise 800 GalIons-65 Feet , - I ilTiTMBWMMMiiii i i nmiinr mi iii i mvsr i rv LlQIllMisMMiii III! im,lP' K Machine lifts water 65 feet .and at with four foot head could not will discharge 3000 gallons a (Sperlal Dlapatrh to Ttaa Journal. The Dalles, Or., May 17. In an effort to solve the Irrigation problem In the Co lumbia river valley, and in fact in all val leys of large rivers where the water sup ply Is abundant, a pneumatic water lift, a contrivance manufactured in this city by the Pneumatic Water Lift & Land company, a corporation with Ita Office and principal place of business here, has been invented. The company recently Installed one of Its lifts at Bialock, Gilliam county. In a test made by the officers of the com pany a week ago Sunday , by operating the device at a speed of six revolu tions to the minute it was possible to raise 800 gallons of water 65 feet a minute. At a speed of 26 revolutions a minute the device threw so much wa ter that it could not be carried off through the mains that had been put In place leading from the machine .on the bank of the r)ver to the ground sought to be irrigated. At present the ma chine is driven by a gasoline engine, bat it Is the purpose of the company to attach a current wheel to it and utilize TAKES HORSE, SELLS IT, . (Special Dispatch to Th Journal.) McMlnnvlUe, Or.. May 17. Alfred Otth was arrested by Sheriff Hender son for having stolen a horse belong ing to R. Chillcott, who lives near Day ton. Otth had formerly worked for Chlll eott, who still owed him for his work. and he said in order to get a part of bis pay he took the horse and sold it to Mr. Petersen, living near McMlnnvlUe, who paid $16. Otth Is 23 years old and a native or Switzerland, having been in this country two years. He was ar raigned before Justice Hopfleld and bound over to the grand Jury under $200 bonds. Mr. Chillcott got his horse back. Cloverdale, Or., Woman Insane. (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) McMlnnvlUe, Or., May 17. Mrs. Jen nie R. Cox of Cloverdale, Or., has been committed to the asylum, having been adjudged Insane by County Judge Pearce. She was demented over religion and the officers had a struggle to get her aboard the train. She was brought here from Newberg, where she had been staying for a fev days. BoysJ. Arcanum Meets. (gnaclal Dispatch to Ilia J annul.) Minneapolis, Minn., May 17. More From a photograph ' TO GET WAGES OVERDUE and Q; i: t six turns a minute a ten Inch pipe take care of the flow. The machine minute at 22 revolutions. the power of the river to operate It, thus reducing the cost of power to the minimum. At the point where the de vice is set up there is sufficient cur rent in the stream to give a velocity of six revolutions a minute, apparently all that is required. The pneumatic lift consists of a drum seven feet in diameter and 16 feet long. Around this drum Is a double steel tube 10 by 13 Inches, open at the outer end of the cylinder and discharging Into the stand pipe at the Inner end. As the cylinder revolves these tubes dip up the water and carry It toward the stand pipe, forcing It upward. It Is claimed one foot for every four feet length of tube. The machine at Blaleck has 360 feet of coll tube, 'therefore has a lifting capacity of 90 feet, although so far It has been tested only to 65 feet. The company which owns the device rfor the Pacific coast 'states, which is composed of The Dalles people, proposes installing it on the banks of the Co lumbia river adjacent to lands they own for irrigation purposes. than 200 delegates, representing 30 grand jurisdictions of the United States and Canada, ' are attending the annual meeting of the supreme council of the Royal Arcanum, which convened here today for a nine days' session,. The opening session was devoted largely to the annual reports of officers and standing committees. The reports show that the total membership of the order Is now 260,000 and that its affairs art in a hlghty satisfactory condition. A Poor Weak Woman A she b termed, will endure bravely aad patiently sJes which strong man weald give way nder. e laet is wenaea are more patient than taey ht te be under such troubles. Every women' ought to know that she may obtain the most eaperieaced medioal adviee fir tiutrt and in &tlt nnfiJtnct and privacy by writing te the World's .Dispensary Medioal Association, R. V. fieroe, M. I)., President, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce) hat been chief eeatnltia physician of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgieal Lastitata, of Buffalo, N. Y for many years and has bad a wider oraetioal xneriai.M l5,,h t'e'1tm"Bt of W9?,9?' th" "T ther phyticfan im this oetmtry. Hit medicines ere world-famous for their sstoaiihiai effioaey. Tbe most perfect remedy veer devised for week and desV oale womea) is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescriptioa. IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG. SICK WOMEN WELL. ihe. ""I"dT,l?e? rmpteme of woman's peculiar ailments era fully set torth a Plan Englnb Ja the People's Medical Adviser (1008 page.), a newly revised and ip-te-dato Edition of which, cloth-bound, will be mailed fr- oa' receipt at 31 eae-ceat stamp to pay cost at mailing mly. Address as above. There's no mystery we. after we once get you into a Every stitch is nineteen-'leven "WHERE YOU GET THE goes into Sit Geological Changes of Many Centuries Can Be Seen on Bonebon Tract. 8pectil PUpatch t The Journal.) Dee, Or., May 17. The Bonebon tract; two miles south of hers. Is being cleared and set to fruit trees. The tract consists of 1000 acres of logged off land. A mammoth steam engine with one mile of Steel cable is used, bringing out stumps as large In diam eter as six feet. The work is so well systematized that stumps and small brush three-fourths mile from the en gine are pulled easily. Centuries be fore the disturbance that made the cracks In the rock where now flows the melted snow from Mount Hood, known as the east, middle and west forks of Hood river, this land was a lake bot tom and the sediment of thousands of years is deposited there. The forming of the rivers mentioned drained the land and later It was covered with dense for ests of fir and cedar timber, some reach ing a diameter of nine feet. Twenty years ago the Oregon Lumber company acquired 18,000 acres of this land, and during the past four years has logged off about 4000 acres, which has been disposed of to those desiring to plant orchards. The Mount Hood railroad from Hood River to Parkdale passes through por tions of the old lake bed and a visit discloses n a cut made by the railroad The Druggist Knew From Experience I have been selling Dr. Kilmer's Bwamp-Koot for the past three years and those of my customers who buy It, speak favorably regarding It I have used It In my own family with good re sults, and I believe the preparation has great curative value. Tou may use this as you like. "Very respectfully, C B. RUPE & SON, By C. B. Rupe, Mgr.. Seymour, Texas. Personally appeared before me this 20th day of July, 1903, C. B. Rupe. Druggist, who subscribed the above statement and made oath that the same Is true In substance and In fact. R. C. JANES, J. P. and Ex-Offlclo. letter to . 7n. Kilmer k Oo Blnghamton. K. T. Prove Whit Swamp-Root Will Be For Toi Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Blngham ton, N. T., for a sample bottle. It will convince anyone. Tou will also receive a booklet of valuable Information, tell ing all about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention The Portland Dally Journal. Regular fifty cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all. drug stores. about dressing STEIN BLOCH BEST" On Washington Near Fifth company pieces of bark, limbs, stumps and log that had been under the ground for centuries. They were embedded in clay deposit and were easily traced. Here plainly are shewn, evldenoes of the treat batUe the Indians tell of bar ing taken place between .Mount Hood and Mount Adams., ', During this "bat tle" fissures in the rock I were Jnade, forming the three forks of Hood river and draining the great lake where now busy men are clearing land on which to grow Hood Rlrer valley apples for ages nance. , EUREKA. SAILS, BOUND ON HUNT FOR TREASURE . i (Catted Prase Leased Wire.) Los Angeles, May 17. Bound for treasure hunt In southern seas, the steam schooner Eureka was scheduled to sail out of Los Angeles harbor this afternoon' with a picked crew of It men and Captain Burtls at the helm. The announced destination of the ves sel Is Amapala, Honduras,' but the men who make up her crew say that the helm is set for, the coast et Salvador. The sailors . were picked for strength and courage and those who admitted they might be afraid of risking their llvee were excused from signing. They receive 20 per cent more than' the usual seaman's wage. The vessel was outfitted by J. C. Mellen, a Loe Angeles capitalist, and, two others. WiiiM' toel of Jl lei Charpitting, the new economy land-clearing method which has solved one of Oregon's greatest prob lems, makes it possible for us to put you in possession of a superb orchard or garden tract near Portland for a very small figure. ' Figure for yourself: It has always in the past cost on an average of about $5 to get out each stump from fertile logged-off lands in Oregon. And logged-off lands have been developed into our richest pro ducing districts. 1 t Even if a poor man got a cheap strip it cost him a snug sum in labor before he could get his orchard or garden into use. To be sure, Independence came in the end; but it was a stiff game to play. Now the order of things suddenly changes. Charpitting is discovered, experimented with and finally perfected so that you can cnarpit that big stump for about 50 cents. And it's more like fun than hard work. Naturally, until these logged-off districts are grabbed up, as 'they will bethe man of limited means has a chance to get in. We seized Charpitting as soon as it was perfected, learned the whole knack thoroughly and put it to use on a big scale in a'n incomparably fertile tract tributary to' the Portland market It is this district that we are now offering you and that makes up our BEAVER HOMES orchard and garden tracts at This land being fertile, having plenty of fine water, being in ideal surroundings and at an easy dis tance from the city, nas an assured future. It is near Goble, an hour's ride from Portland down the Co lumbia. t j But for CHARPITTING it would have been cleared by the old blast-and-grub method and sold at fancy prices. Thanks to CHARPITTING, the clearing is but a minor problem. So we are going to recruit several hundred producers by SELLING AT $25, $30, $35, $37.50, and up to $80 per acre. And every acre is good land. Prices are . regulated, not by the quality of the soil, but by desirability of location. The $25 land of today will be the $50 and $80 land of tomorrow, as the district is settled dp by producers. You can make small payments monthly, quarterly, semi-annually, or annually, if you wish. In TRACTS OF 5, 10, 15, 20 and up to 40 acres. , ' i . We want you to see this land. There is no test the expert can apply that the matchless soil will not meet. Water competition makes it possible for you to ship your products to Portland for the smallest possible rate. ' School, network of good roads, YOUR HOME. COME IN TODAY and t Wim ITS) fln imoire Quick Service Excellent Food and Moderate Prices 205 Fourth Street TO SELL AT VALUE State Land Agent :; flhmehart Announces ' Intention to ' J .... . . . " Appraise It All. Salem, Or., May 17. "The department Is going to wage a rfgorous campaign to get all state school lands in Oregon appraised so sales at true valuation will be made possible In all cases," said Bute Land Agent T. A. Rlnehart, who left today for the headwaters of San tlam river In Linn county, where he will look: after some school lands. There Is not much school land being sold at present For the next few months the land agent will be traveling over the state working on the appraisements. . AVeather Retards Berries. Hood River. Or Hay 17. " Cold weather in the Hood River valley for best of conditions In every regard. Arrange With Us to SEE THIS DISTRICT !14 Dimber Exchange Bldfl. jf af tMei! If, having dined at our Cafeteria, you find the service the best and cleanest, and the cooking tasty and wholesome (all as we have represented) after seeing how immaculately clean we keep everything you can the more readily believe that these same con ditions exist in our kitchens and bakery where the .food is prepared. So, too,' care is exercised in selecting only the" choicest vegetables, fruits, butter and cream. It is really fresh, when you eat it. One the ' t .... ' . . v '", ' .. V ; . lf " ' thsTpast 10 days has greatly retarded ripening of strawberries. It la I! ex pected the first ipe Hood Alvei berrlss , win reach the market about May 15. While the berries will be little later than last 'year the fruit will be very large this year, 'i weather having con duced vto. growth.: f.t.v -r .r"--. i i. v Wlaconsla Gaa Association. Milwaukee, Wis., May XT. The annu- al meeting of the Wisconsin Gas asso ciation was begun at the Hotel me ter today with. President W. H. Wins. low of Superior presiding." The assocl atlon will, spend two days in the read-. Ing and discussion of papers on tsch-. nlcal subjects. ' v 1 ' 3 1 pffen Exhausted print Comes On. Busf Vevet ' ilnoe Taking Hood's CatsaparUla. Mr A. Honkins. S2S East Raale St. East Boston, Masa., writes: -years ago I learned what a gooa meaicino Hood's Sarsap&rllla is. When spring came on I was thoroughly exhausted and obliged to take my bed. I thought I would rather die than be, ao tired. I began taking Hood's Sarsapartllu, and before long was perfectly well. Sine then,' spring has never oome without my having Hood's Saaparllla." Get It today In usual liquid form. or chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs. It's the place to select for :ena Block North of Court House Laid I