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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1912)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND. WEDNESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 21, 1S12. GILLS RELATE TO GARNISHES SELF -NEW MANAGER OF EMPRESS THEATRE TAXMI TURN AT FISH BALL v. "Monkey Parties " He Says, rFoTeshadow706bmbf I ft Show intended Settlers What Land Produces, Jhen TbeF Will -Take -Interest Hilles, Holds a "Suggestion" Small Homes in Washington Schepps Asks" Whitman for BIue SiirBed QuTItTTurk ish. Rug, Silk-Sox. Oregon City Man Has Batch; ver-Assessed; Million-" I - -i.' "' . . . LA ' - n Working Hours in of'State- .., Members of-House. aires Get Off Modern Aristocracy."- SHELDON TO QUARD REPUBLICAN GASH S0I'bBdeie Ill CRITICIZES ON BUB 111 MTCDD OWERS IfnlLll I l i 1 Christian Schuftbel. candidate for the legislature In Clackamas county, has already gathered a mil bunch of bill n proposes to put before the legisla ture next January If he-is elected to membership. Desirln ""'c'8. suggestions that may iP them, he has sent out drafts of the bills. Two of these bills relate to water lasted because of the PO'"tvelop- - went at Oregon uiy - CUckamas river. One of, these bills would impose, upon all ter powers, beginning in 1914, a uniform jearl li cense of not loss than 60 cents nor more than 2 for each theoretical horsepower .Claim Exemption is provided for power claimed by the United Stat., slat, or any municipality, also in favor of small users who clnim water for the genera tion of 2b theoretical horsepower or Amount Xs SmalL "Trader the present law," says Mr. Schuebel. "the Portland Railway. Light "A Power company ft paying i cent li cense per horsepower per annum for the same privilege that it costs any other company organized sirce May 22. 1909. from 95 cents to $2 license per horse power per annum." Another biU requires the nssf-ssmcnt of all waterpowers in the county where located on the value per horsepower of the water claimed, and says they shall be listed separately from the land and ipxovemcntSi rpki. further remilres assessment of each franchise and right of way of a public service corporation by the State board separately, and the listing separately of all personal property and all Improvements "On, in and under land." A detailed report is provided for on all waterpower claims, and experts employed by the county assessor are authorized to make computations and verify the reports that are turned In. Thiq bill also provides that no public service corporation shall own a vested right In Its franchise, hut is declared to hold all Us franchise rifrhts as a trustee for the people of Oregon and for the .people of every county and municipality 'in which it operates. vvvuau uu". buw iiiRru&SlitfHiM.iLQh.r Villi fnr tVrn abortion of school supervisors, TepW lng the present law on that subject. An effort to' knock out the supervisors at the 1911 session was defeated after a lively fight. Another bill by the Oregon City man provides a new system for permits for burning slashings. It makes each road supervisor ex-offlcio a fire warden with in his district, with power to Ihsur and revoke permits for burning slashings be tween June 1 and October 1 of each year, provided that no such permit may be Issued for land where a dead tree or snag over 20 feet high remains stand ing1. Twenty-four hours' notice to ad joining resident land owners is required before a fire is started. It Is objected THRE -J THREE No Groceries No Meat Market No Pots and Pans il H. W. Plerong. H. W. Plerong has been installed as manager of the Empress tlieatre. Mr. Plerong succeeds Johnny (Frisco) Wil Llanis. The new manager of the Empress has been In the show business for more than 15 years. He was born and raised In Canton, Ohio, and his first execu tive position in showdom was the man agership of the old Euclid-Avenue Opera House In Cleveland. Ohio. Ho traveled with productions en tour for four years and for seven summer seasons he was the manager of Pain's Fireworks of n-hih bo hnd rharee in that company's early visit to Portland. Mr. Plerong also served as business manager oi ine Great Northern Theatre in Chicago and presided over the destinies of the Met ropolitan Opera House of St. Paul, Minn. In recent years Mr. Piercing has been allied with the Orpheum circuit. He was the manager of the Orpheum road show, and served later as the manager of the St. Paul Orpheum, the Puluth Orpheum and the Orpheum of Lincoln, Neb. He comes to Portland from the Lincoln Orephum. Mr. Pierong's wife and child will Join him in Portland within a fortnight. that, the prenent law makes the permit too difficult to obtain. Jrfr. Schuebel also gives notice of his i n t e fitt oTT Vf"vttkJJisJijiXJj' r stricter regulation of working hourTtn3. mills. He says he will have a bill for a maximum of 60 hours per week in the mills and factories of thf' state. A bill providing .figl.t-hour shifts for the fac tory workers at Oreson City caused one of the bitterest flgliis- of the last ses sion, and it was finally lost. Boys Will He Hoys. Long IJeaeh, Cnl , Aug. 21 Three hoys are under surveillance by the po lice because they staked cralm beneath the life lines on a bathing beach. Their delighted howls when their schemes were fruitful led to their capture. EDAYS IT WIP3 av Staple and Seasonable s Marked at Phenomenal Reductions For Immediate Sale DAYS No Candy Store No Restaurant No Tea Room The best way to reach prospective settlers and get them interested Is by showing them products of the soil, says C. 5. Arneyi western Immigration and Industrial agent of the Northern Pa cific, who was In Portland yesterday on his wsy home to Spokane from a trip into central Oregon. "Let the" people s what you can produco and "gfve them an apple or pear or two to taste and you have them in terested and they seek more Informa tion," said Mr. Arney at the Portland hotel yesteTi-Wy afternoon. "Realising this, the Northern Pa cific Is now keeping me busy getting together a very comprehensive exhibit of products of Oregon,- Washington and Idaho that will be shown at the state fair at Detroit, the Northwest Land Products show at Minneapolis and then to be taken to various cities in the mid dle states on an exhibit train. "I have already secured a great many splendid specimens and we have a pro fessor, M. J. Wessels, at work at Hpo kaha putting up the exhlhits in fine shape. The exhibit car will be Started out January 1 and will be kept on the move until July 1. At the fair and land show the company will have prac tically every member of its immigra tion and industrial department on hand to explain to the visitors conditions In the Pacific northwest states. "The crops In central Oregon and throughout the entire Pacific northwest are simply magnificent this year, and the farmers are happy. It Is a pleasure to travel through the country these days. The demonstration farms In cen tral Oregon were a revelation to u and they will prove of Immense value In encouraging development work. "One thing that Impressed me was that the most reasonable land values I know of in the northwest were In the central Oregon country, and especially around Bend. And again, speaking of conditions In general, the great prob lem that confronts the commercial or ganizations of the Pacific northwest today Is an adjustment of land values so that they will meet the hopes and expectations of prospective settlers. On the whole, land values In the Pacific northwest are held too high and this is Impeding the immigration movement fhw-jwllraad pre doing all they can to Interest a goo3"1'fffPwf"Mtijtt a,gJ with success, although perhaps not as great as they would like." Mr. Arney is a former newspaper man and was appointed to his present position last March, when the office was created. He plans to make a tour of the Willamette valley" In a few weeks and will ulso make an extended trip through central Oregon to get closer in touch with the field. He left last night for Spokane. Xbe.re- are more brands of cussed ness than there are brands of religion. ONLY THREE DAYS MORE Unparalleled Bargains -Buy Now of the Prices Will Never Be as Low Again ONLY THREE DAYS MORE T lipm (fnlted Pre Lested Wire.) Washington, "Aug. il. For the purpose of seeking suggestions Charles D. Hilles, Chairman of the Republican national committee, held a conference with Re publican members of the house yester day. No progressives attended the meeting- Congressman William U. Uc Kinley, head of the Taft publicity bu reau, denied that the purpose ot thi meeting was to "smoke1 out" the pro gresslves. Hlllcs announced later that George Sheldon of New York had been selected as treasurer of the national Republican committee. Thirty-live Republican congressmen saw Hilles. Only three members of congress classed as progressives called upon him. These were It. R. Rees of Kansas and G. N. Hansen and I. W. Wood of Iowa. Wood and Rees shook hands with the national chairman and then hurried away, but Ilaugen remained and chatted briefly with Hilles. by Hauling of material to the site of the new home to be erected by H. L. pit tock . on Inspiration Point. Kings Heights, has been temporarily suspend ed because of a controversy over the use of a road running through the grounds of Tully Villa, the home of Dr. Andrew C. Smith, on Barnes Heights. Dr. Smith has kept the road in repair and In good condition for the use of his automobiles, In the belief that It was a private thoroughfare, or nn much so as he wished to make it. With the start ing of work- on the Pittock place, the road was commissioned by the contract ing company for haulage purposes. The heavy auto trucks cut through the road's surface and damaged it con siderably, and Dr. Smith found further cause for grievance because the traffic was disturbing to the quiet of his horns. The road winds through tlu garden patch and the lawns of the Smith home, nnd the trucks on their Journey passed close to the front door of the house. .iiuim, io uioi-K un.s iraiuc, nao a section of the road scraped out, mak ing It Impassable to the trucks, and to his own machines as well. Further to tie up the thoroughfare a wire fepce has been stretched across it at the en trance to the .Smith grounds. ! Now Dr. Smith Is lending his efforts toward the building of a new road, which will pass to the west of his yard, and continue on over the streetcar tracks to the Pittock place. Journal Want Ads bring results. inn! aUk ANGERED TRUCKS DESTROYS AUTO RAD Merchandise in Every -Merchondase of rterll . 59 . (Helta! Psess LmA Wire. 'Washington, Aug. 21. Denunciation of the system by which the poor of the slums of Washington are made to bear the heavy burden of taxation, while mil lionaires escape, was made to the house In a report returned by a special In vestigating committee. The report as serted that the over assessing of small homes had discouraged laboring men and resulted in paralysis to building operations. The report alleges that the homes of August Helmont, Levi Z. Leiter, Wllltam Boardman, Lars Anderson, John R. Mc Lean and former United States Senator William A. Clark, all millionaires, are undervalued. Referring to John R. McLean's coun try home, the report s,ys that It is as sessed at $3500 per acre, adding; "The land could not be bought for JJ5,000 per acre. Improvements are as sessed at J25.0OO, whlctr-amotlnt would not pay for the stone wall In front Of the property!" ' LQGOfF H PUN Y A score of land cwners have been seeking John B. Hlbbard and the Italian consul since an article appeared In This Journal last Sunday telling how Italians had cleared and put Into a condition of the highest cultivation a tract of 40 acres bought by Mr. Hlbbard, the ar rangement being that for their work they should gat two thirds of what j,he land produced, Mr. Hlbbard one third. "For years men who own logged off lands or partially cleared tracts have he-r seeking plans for utilizing It at reasonable cost," said Mr Hlbbard. "They say tills plan of dividing with the workers and making a contract of length sufficient to give the Italians a chance to make- something is like dis covering a treasure. "Others say they don't believe It can be done. 1 assure these that it is nil true. If there Is anything in the plan we ar using outjU'-MnTtttirTaTTn,v-t WTf, in - wtr??rr7. i r .Alii. of developing rich unused lands about Portland, I am gUd of it. Thousands of aens should be gotten Into use and would be if at n reasonable cost." Pioneer Bridge Torn Down. (Speclnl to Tho Journal 1 Klgln. Or., Aug. 21. The old wooden bridge which spans the Grand Ronde river at lClg'.n on the Wallowa county road nnd which l as stood since early days. Is being torn down liy County Road Supervisor Campbell and replaced with a modern steel structure. UE MAN OWNERS S3 (C 0riLy (Tfnttea Prs Leased Wire.) Terre Hauts. Ind., Augi IL Bitter de nunciation of Mrs. Btuyvesant Fish's ball at Newport Monday night, when live butterflies and white doves were freed in the reception hall, was voiced here by Eugene V. Debs, the Socialist nomi nee for president ' "Seeley dinners and monkey parties." he said, "foreshadow lhe doom of mod ern aristocracy. The latest exhibition of morbid self conceit and heartless de fiance of the social misery of the masses has been given by MrsV Btuyvesant Fish. The descriptions of this riotous affair are well calcuated to impress upon the minds of thoughtful people the fact that there is something radically wrong with a country In which such a dlspluy of luxury can bs made within a stone's mrow irom wnere Hundreds Of thou sands ot men, women and little children are struggling for a mere existence." Both Claim Same Mt&i Trouble. Balllmore, Aug. 21. Each claiming George F. Shepherd of Cumberland, Md.. las husb'snd, Emma Stewart and Mary comptn held a conference here today. One of the women then started for Los Angeles, where Shepherd Is now In cus tody, to file bigamy charges agalnat him. Early Trial for Dean. (t'nltert 1'reiin Leaned Wire.) New Westminster, B. C, Aug. 21. Charles Dean, accused of the robbery of the Bank of Montreal here on Sep tember 11 lat, when nearly $300,000, the largest amount of loot ever secured by bank robbers on the continent, was arraigned before a magistrate yesterday and remanded for trial on August 28. imnnnrlffii WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF PIANO RENTING Kohler Chase 375 WASHINGTON STREET THREE DAYS .Department v. Things You THREE DAYS No Soda Fountain No Crockety NoMen s Clothing (Cnltad Press Leased Wrs. I , , New York, Aujr. H. Police Lieutenant' Charles Becker, held in ... Tombs here for the murder of Gambler Herman Ro senthal, was denied permission of. Judgo Mulquoen to inspect the notes of the grand jury In indicting him. - Becker was Indignant when informed that his motion had bcenaenled. charging that h Is-fcel-ng discriminated against. Sam Schepps, who testified before the grand jury, sent District Attorney Whit man a requisition for a long list ..of things he said he would need in prison. The list Included a blue silk bed quilt, house slippers, a Turkish rug, whlto silk socks, newspapers, magazines and writing material. After testifying Schepps sent a long message to the mayor of Hot Springs, Ark., thanking him for the courtesies extended to him while he was held there awaiting the ar rival of representatives of Whitman's ' office. - Jack- Sellg, whom Schepps says Is the man who engaged the gangsters to kill Rosenthal, was brought here from Proy- , ldonco today and taken before the grand Jury. He testified that he was arrested, on a trumped up charge several weeks before the Rosenthal murder by Detec tives White anil" Steinert, declaring that White and Steinert slipped a revolver In his pocket. Two Given Hearing. (Uotted Press Lonxd TVL-s.) San Francisco, Aug. 21. Mrs. Cera M. Perkins and Frederick Pattlsoa, under Indictment by the grand Jury fer the theft of a $4500 automobile belonging to Nicholas J. McNamara. a retired San Mateo banker, were given a preliminary hearing In the superior court yesterday. Wa Rent Your Piano FROM A LARGE LINE Standard Makes "-Sefcfern. jtcurarfuaUawcd arnH variety or quality when renting a piano. Need No Liquors No Groceries No Bakery (.:a I nrr - 1 .. ... i i.i ... .