The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, February 10, 1913, Page 2, Image 2

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    V
THE OREGON WtY 'jOURNAI PORTLAND, MQNDAY feVENINO, FEBRUARY 10, , 1913.
I
Composite Barrett-Hurd Meas
ure, Which Is to. Pass This
.. Afternoon, Almost Duplicate
; of His Rejected One.
)
u ' ' ''','.' (Staff Correspondence.)
' Salem, i' Or., Feb. lO.Nflw that the
, house and senate good roads committee
' have agreed on a county road bonding
. measure satisfactory to all Interests,
- ''-Representative Clarence Reames of
Jackson county Is enjoying a quiet
' laugh on fellow members of the house.
It It j-encrally agreed that he has the
laugh coming, .
! It's' all because the compromise road
; " measure, which combines the good
; ij points and removes the features not
.-oDjectea to in tne Barrett bill, wnicn
, '"passed the senate, and the Hurd bill
t. which passed the house, the composite
being called the Barrett-Hurd bill lp
-compliment to both, Is almost word for
word the same as H B. 13, which
Reames Introduced on the first day of
J, ? the session.
., , Eut H. B. 1$ was opposed so hard by
in legislators who favored the Hurd plan
that Eeames withdrew it. for the sake
S'of harmony, though he continued to
fight for the principles It contained.
,f , The Hurd plan, which the house ap
'J proved, provided for the calling of bond
1, elections by the taxpayers at a county
convention, made up of representatives
!, chosen at road district conventions. The
"Barrett Mil, on the other hand, put
i I,' not only the cabling oi elections but
i' the spending' of the., money entirely in
the hands of the cepnty court. Oppo-
neuts of the Hurd plan urged that it
, would prove so cumbersome In a:ilon as
. ii, to make any bond issue Impossible,
while against the Barrett bill It was
declared that it did not safeguard the
; interests of the taxpayers.
;! After all this was threshed out be
fore the Joint committees they ellmln
I ated the county convention plan, and
i adopted the Ban ett plan of having elec
i, tiona called by the county court At
( the same time they lifted out of the
f'Hurd bill a section requiring that the
j. road Improvement . desired, and the
t money to- be spent on It, must be spj-
cincaiiy stated on the ballot
, This was exectly the plan that the
t Hcames bill had featured. Whea
"Reames pointed, it out to the confer
i. ance committees, tfiey offered to call
the , compromise ; the Reames-Barrett-
,,Hurd bill, but he laughingly declined
!ut now he Is wondering if the fact
, that bis bill was No, 13 didn't have
' sorsetiiag to do with its cad and early
. j, aeain. .
The - compromise road measure has
n.besn spade a special ordor of business
'in the house for -.8 o'clock this after
noon. There seems no d.mbt that It will
; pass both bouse and senate
HAMILTON CORBETFS
I CONDITION IMPROVED
t. The condition of Hamilton !
' who Friday evening was operated upon
8marlta" hospital for appendl-
WM " Improved this morning
jj that he was able to read, a newspaper,
"according to Infor ation riven out at
,,the ospital. The pror .nent clubman
S 08!6d "Or It night and yester
,s day, and it la said that ultimate recor
H iry is certain.
NEW ROAD BILL IS AS
REAMES WOULD HAVE IT
llf 4k III
It M i III
l : .,'f' H
SMI -f - 'JtSi
Representative Clarence, L. Reames
of Medford.
IE SALARIES
TO ADD $100,000.
io our costs?
Two Supreme, 6 Circuit Judge
ships Created and Pay of 10
Circuit Judges Advanced in
Bills Now Pending.
XSSn-Hi , "'00(-On on Hambur"
"6v"K T iJ th two largest
moti9n P'ctare theatre In
-JI' JL wo.,proram a" exhibited at
ij the same time on separate screens haa
;been opened in Cleveland.
(3Uff CorrMponieaft.)
Balem, Or., Feb, 10. If bills pending
in the legislature for Increase of the
Supreme court new circuit Judges and
additional salary for circuit Judges are
passed, the Increased expense of the
courts for the next two years will be
approximately $100,000.
The bill increasing the supreme rrx-h
by adding two new judges carries $30,
000 for the biennial periodi the salary
of each Judge being $4500 a year, with
t000 a year for additional clerk hlr
The bill Increasing the pay of circuit
Judges to $4000 a year adds to the nav
of 10 circuit Judges tu tha extent of:
ioou a year each.
Then there are bills providing for th
creation of six new circuit Judgeships,
three of these In Multnomah county.
The Others create new circuits out of
Polk, Yamhill and Lincoln counties for
the new Twelfth district Washington
and Tillamook of the new Thirteenth,
and Coos and Curry of the new Four
teenth. ;-.
This calculation does not take Into ac
count the additional expense that wiU
be Incurred should the legislature adopt
the superior court plan, under which
each county would be given a superior
court and the county Judgeship abol
ished to make way for a third county
commissioner.
The senate has already passed the
bills increasing the supreme court and
establishing a new district to consist of
Polk, Yamhill and Lincoln counties. Fa
vorable report has been ordered on the
bill adding one circuit judge in Multno-
1914,1$ PLAN NOW
34 Present Judges Object in
Many Cases to Yielding Up
Jobs at Once as First Stated
in Latourette Bill.
(Staff Oorreponlonee.l
Salem, Or., Feb. 10. If the of floe ot
county judge Is abolished by the present
leglslature .lt will apparently be under
a compromise measure that will leave
all county Judges in office until the next
general election In 1914. , . ,
This amendment to tha Latourette
bill, which substitutes the superior court
system In Oregon for the present cir
cuit courts, and would legislate county
judges out of office as soon as the bill
becomes a law, will be recommended by
the Judiciary committee of ,t the house
which now has the bill under considera
tion. Latourette Is a member of this
committee and the amendment haa bis
approval.
There are S4 county Judges in Oregon.
and they and their friends have de
veloped a powerful opposition ' to the
measure In its original form. Many of
the Judges were elected In 1911, after
arduous campaigns, and they declare it
would be unjust to thf m to abolish their
office and salaries within a few months
after they had been elected to serve four
years. By giving them two years In of
fice it is hoped to allay much of their
opposition. Tha full terms of many
other county judges will expire in 1914. J
Of COMMENT
Washington Legislature Pays
Unusual Tribute to Head of
Walla Walla'Prison ; Pension
'Bills Up This Week.
(Special to The Journal.) '
State House, Olympla, Wash.. Feb. 10.
The Washington lesrislature has
passed complimentary memorials lndora
Ing the management of the state cent
tentiary by. Warden C. S. Reed. Reed
has been warden for the nast lx venm
having resigned as superintendent of the
siaie training; achoot at Chehalis to go
to Walla Walla. Before that he was a
member of tha state boajd ot control
and his efficiency in these various posi
tions nas now been publicly recognlxed.
Reed has tendered his resignation, to
take effect aa soon as Governor Lister
can appoint a successor, . and has ac
cepted a position of superintendent of
tha Minnesota penitentiary at a salary
mree times larger than he haa been
receiving. .
The memorial to congress to mark
with suitable monuments the old Ore
gon trail from, the Missouri river to
puget sound, has been passed by both
nouses.
Although a total of only four bills
has been reoelved bv the g-overnor aa a
result of the f lrat four weeks of the
session, the present week will witness
a great amount of important legislation
ii the law makers dispose of the meas
ures which are on the calendar. To-
HA
L FISH BILLS
iiosSKs
Anderson of Clatsop Hope's to
, Kill Seufert's Seining While
Anderson of Wasco Assails
Lower River Work.
fnM"AV will Amjfe im 4V... aAnMkM .
xawyrs roes of County Courts. 1 -ion mm whi. mi.
The abolishment of the present county Dension mothr who wt in
cuur .y.iem m vregon - one judicial gent circumstances through the death
reform upon which practically all mem
bers of the State Bar association ap
pear to bo In harmony. It Is one of
the only reforms on which the majority
and minority reports of tha commission
appointed by Governor Weat to recom
mend revisions in the legal code agreed.
Lawyers declare that In most cases
county Judges are not lawyer and are
unfamiliar with law. and that it is not
right to leave the settlement of import
ant legal questions to them. - The
Latourette bill provides that the orobata
cases that now come before the county
court shall go to the superior court.
would Cut Out Political Plots. -
Another objection , to the Latourette
bin as at present drafted that the
amendment would remove la the possi
bility of political Jugglery In the selec
tion or the county commissioner to taka
the place of the county judge as chair
man of tha boanl of commissioners.
This Is left to appointment by the com
missioners, by the bill as drafted, and
already rumors of political plots to put
certain persons in office in Multnomah
county have been heard. By leaving
county Judges in office until 1914. how
ever, the vacancy in the board would be
'filed by the voters at a regular elec
tion. i i t&kl$
BRIDGE CARPENTER "
INSTANTLY KILLED
Jesse E. Crawford, 655 Alblna avenue,
bridge carpenter for the O.-W. B... & N.
companyt was Instantly killed this
morning under the trestle at the foot
of Russell Btreet, when a heavy timber
fell on him. With other workmen, ho
was raising the trestla with jacks.
Heavy joists supporting the trestle had
been sawed away from other parts of
the support As the Jacks lifted the
trestle high enough to free the Joists,
one of the latter toppled over, sriking"
Crawford across the chest.
The deceased was 18 years old, un
marrled, and leaves a mother in Seattle.
of a husband or his imprisonment In
state institution, either penal ojr an In
sane asylum.
The bill to abolish a number of the
state commissions will probably be as
signed to third reading, and the reports
of the special committees to investigate
irregularities in the state printing de
partment and the reformatory at Monroe
wm report vednesday.
CARCASSES ROT
in raws
Dirt Piles Up in Unlined Ex
cavations, Bitterly Com-'
plains North Bend.
man. The. bill paying all judges 14000 a
year lias passed both house, and Is up
to the governor.
(Salem Bureau of the Journal.)
Salem, Or., Feb. 10. Formal com
plaint against the Coos Bay Water com
pany has been filed with the railroad
commission by the city of North Bend
The complaint alleges that the water be
ing supplied the city is unfit for human
consumption, that .th0 reserVoirs are
small, unprotected from the Intrusion of
persons ana animals and subject to
contamination.
It Is asserted that the reservoirs con
sist slmply'of excavations In the ground
without lining or other protection, and
that they are utterly without means of
cleaning out or removing the accumula
tion of filth.. It is alleged they have
not been cleaned for years, and are
filled with dirt, vegetable matter and
carcasses of animals.
Complaint Is also made against the
Inadequacy of the service because of 'too
small and decayed pipe lines, and of the
alleged exorbitant price being charged
lor the service.
Dr. Arnold Lorand
. Physician to the Baths, Carlsbad, Austria
, R A SEE WhSpt's'ay "'th ThrUKh Rati0ml Diet" fr0m lhepresso(the
As a breakfast fooiJ another variety of the heallH
fuJ cereals which are much used in America
would be advantageous. Grape-Nuts, in which the
floury substance has been dextrinized by long bak
ing and thus rendered digestible and easy of as
similation, is eaten with cream and would be a use
ful addition to our usual breakfast
thun f tilis;eminenit ?urPean authority to the wealthiest health
interSinVto Americas?5' thC famUS batb f Qrlsbad) is especi
G r a p eJ mi ft g
FOOD
is sold at grocers almost everywhere in America for 15c the pkg.
food ;.'he;lth luxury" in Europe, this sturdy healthivin
- is within the reach of practically every American at trifling cost. '
wide-awake, -go-ahead people.
lev S fnif wain"m?in?r kdy-buiidinK elements of prime wheat and malted bar
fast Food ! at h0me and abro.ad the title of "e Kin of Break
"There's a Reason.19
ACTION TONIGHT
UP0NGAS REPEAL
Kellaher's Request to Have
Bill Transferred Is Withdrawn.
(Staff Corrnpondence.)
Salem, Or.,; Feb. 10. Senator Kella
her's two bills for repeal of the fran
chise held by the Portland Gas & Coke
company will come before the Judiciary
committee tonight Kellaher this morn
ing declared he Is anxious .to have ac
tion taken, and moved to refer the two
bills to the Multnomah delegation.
Thompson said he understood legal
questions to b8 Involved which should
properly be considered by the Judiciary
committee, and he wanted the bills to
stay there. Chairman Moser of the
Judiciary committee promised the btlln
would be taken up tonight, and Kellaher
then withdrew his ..motion. '
BATES FORGOT RUBBERS;
HE SLIPPED ON WALC
AND LOST HIS WATCH
Tes. slree!" R M Ttataa r
the Bates - Andao!fe' Printing
company, is wearing' hla watch
firmly anchored to hi vest these
wintery days. And it it ever
shows again in Portland he will
wear rubbers as an additional
precaution.
For the fact of the matter is,
. Mr. Bates lost his watch because
he neglected to fasten it firmly
to his clothes and during tha
i last snow he slipped on the aide-
it.
walK in f roht of the Hat Box
store, at Second and Morrison.
If he had only ' worn rubbers
.that day he' would, .not, . hava
slipped and his timepiece would
not have climbed "but of his
. pocket, fallen and, burled Itself
-4n-now whleh it did I , . -"
The watch wai found TafefTy
, H. C. Lillagar, proprietor of tha
, Hat Box. He immediately ad
vertised for the owner in The
journal. Bates advertised In
(Staff Correspondence?
Balem, Or.. Feb. 10.i-Tha old warfare
old, almost, as the Oregon legislature, Is
an again, at this session between the
almon .fishing Interests of tha unnar
na lower iioiumoia river.
For a while, at least, tha hmmn wii
bs tha battleground of the conflicting
lnteresta' though the senate will takj
us turn jater. All legislation to reeu
lata salmon fishing one way or another
so rar introduced haa been in the house.
For many years there haa been ereat
bitterness on the part of the big fishing
interests or tne lower river, against
mosa or. me upper river. r This bitter
nesa at present la chiefly directed
against seufert, the so-called salmon
baron of the upper Columbia, whose
seines and fish wheels do a big business.
. Alleged Sins of Seufert's Men.
Tha lower river men declare that the
upper river Is the natural spawning
ground 01 me uiinooK salmon, and that
Seuferfa seiners, dragging their heavy
seining nets along the sands and shal
lows, not only catch fish In the regular
spawning season, but destroy tons of
eggs already epawned.
Curiously enough, a , Representative
Anderson is leading thft fight on both
sides. A. A. Anderson of Clatsop is
uirecung me Dattie against Seufert and
nis seiners, while J. E. Anderson of
Wasco la defending tha urner river fish.
ermen and introducing retaliatory mea
sures to regulate lower river fishing.
Zf All tha Bllla raised-.
Just aa a sample of tha extent to
which the warfare has gone there aco
Dins in me legislature at Present that
would prohibit almost all salmon fishing
in dowi me upper and lower Columbia
rivers.
Anderson of Clatsop made the first
move by his bill to lengthen the autumn
closed season on the upper river betweea
cascade locks and the mouth of the
ueBchutes, from August 25 to Septem
ber 10, as it now stands, to December
81. This would ittoD all fall flahln In
the upper river.' -Anderson declaroa
that he wants to be fair, but that the
present fall open season In the upper
river takes the fish right in their spawn-
ng season. Hla bill also lengthens
the fall closed season en the lower river
for 16 days, or until September 15.
uarperrter of Multnomah has taken a
hand In the fight by another" bill to
prohibit seining at any, time between
Cascada Locks and The Deschutes.
Some representatives profess to see in
this bill strife between .Seufert and
Taffe, an upper river fish wheel man,
who, it is declared, w6uld be benefited
by the prohibition of seining. .Both
Carpenter and Taffe, however, have
vigorously denied that Taffe haa any
Interest in the measure.
Swatting tha Ziower Kirer.
In retaliation for these proposed
measures twq bills have been Introduced
If Anders6n of Wasco that .would put
a mighty crimp In the salmon fishing
industry on me lower river.
One- of these prohibits any seine, set
net or kM net fishing in the Columbia
river west of the mouth of the Willam
ette, from July IB, 1913, to July 15,
1918. Under' this measure trap fishing
would still be permitted. Anderson of
Wasco says that he, too. Intends to be
fair, but that If upper river fishing is
prohibited to save salmon, then it
should be stopped likewise on the lower
river to make a tfood job of It.
Anderson haa another bill, proposed
"in the Interest of navigation," that
would stop all gill net fishing on the
Columbia river bar, The gill net fish
ermen, he says, are often a menace to
navigation.
These measures will be fought odit
and both interests heard at a meeting
of tha house fisheries committee to
night It is pretty certain to be a lively
affair. But .whatever solution the house
reaches will have tg, be threshed out
again In the-senate, so that the strife
Will be prolonged.
.;,v;, i ' : .
, ' (Staff CorreiDoodcnra.)
Salem, Or.t Feb, JO. -Senator ,T. I
Perkins, Introducer of senate bill 11,
regulating the practice of dentistry, as
Berts' that attacks on the bill consist
largely of misrepresentation. . He said
he Is confident the bill will go through
the, house with little difficulty. It has
already passed the senate.
"In many respects concerning which
the bill Is being criticised," he said this
morning, "the old law is In, fact, un
changed. For instance, the provision for
court review of the action of the state
board, provided by section 4784 o Lord's
Oregon laws, Is unchanged, v Again, the
section providing that those engaged in
practice up to 1906, which has 1 been
'Jumped on, is merely a copy of the
present, law. t is mentioned In the bill
because thf re is a minor amendment 1
the same section. ;. ; t ' ; . -
"A to the creation of v a 'dentists'
trust' the bill Is In fact broader thar,
the present law. Aa the .law stands
dentists are required to have -dlplomal
fronntwne' school connected; with th
association of dental-faculties.' t In re
cent years some of the good schools hav ,
split away from that association, so th
bill I have introduced allows the boar(
to license any dentist possessing q.uali
flcaUons equivalent to the requirement
of that association..:; ; '
"JoTIn F. Logan," who is attorney foi
some of those opposed to the bill, cam
before the committee a short time ago
and said he was satisfied.; The bill
gives power to the board to revoke t
license of dentists who disgrace the pro
f esslon and this I consider a valuabli
provision." r . . , .
FRED D. FISHER, OREGON,
GETS-CUBAN CONSULSHIP
Washington, Feb, 10, The president
toaay nominated Fred D. Fisher of Ore
gon to be consul at Santiago de Cu
THEATRES AMUSEMENTS ENTERTAINMENTS
TffllEATIE -
llth and Morrison
Main 1 and A-11J2.
EXQUISITE DELIGHTFUL)
The Class of the Season. '
: . VERDICT '
Last night's bigaudlence '
' SPECIAL PRICES
MATINEE WEDNESDAY
Wed. Matinee Lower floor, $1.60, $1.00.
uaicony, i.uo, v&o, 50c.
Werba" A Luescher present
TUB CIIARMINO FAVORITB '
In the brilliant Viennese Operetta of
fun end fashion,
"THE; MUSI
II
. EXCELLENT Cast
, SUPERB PRODUCTION"
AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA
. . PRICES:
Evenings Lower floor, J.' tl.BO,
Balcony, fl.60,. $1. e. Mo.
BEAT
SALE
Inl
llth and Morrison. v
WORLD'S GREATEST DANCER
Own Company Dancere, Orchestra,
Production. t
ADEUHE.
GEM EE
NEXT-
FRL, SAT. NIGHTS
FEBRUARY 14-15
Different Program Each Evening,
..Lower '.floor, 10 rows. 12.80, ii rowe,
ti. Balcony, S rows, ii-, rows, $1,501
10 rows, $1. Mall orders received. Ad
dress letters, checks, W. T. Pangle.
ma
IE
Malrt 2. A-5380.
U, U Baker. Manasrer.
Tonight bargain night, all seats 2 5o. All
week, matinees Wedneaday and Satur.
day, DramatUation of the thrilling novel.
"THE BRASS BOWL." iT
By Louis Joseph Vance. A mysterlous""f
w'iui. ar aiornson and fascinating burglar storr. Intense!
uramatic ana lnieresung. First time in West. Evenings 26c: 85c. BOo. Mata tha
Matinee Daily
It l IM . I IT
wmmm,
Mum
Seventh and Taylor Streets.
Main 6. A-1020.
. Mats., 15c, 25c, 60c Nights, 15c, 25o.
60c, 76c.
THIS WEEK
Assisted by My Le Roy. 1
''THE FLYING PIANO.
SIX OTHER FEATURE ACTS.
And Animated Weekly.
if. - xt . - WEEK FEBRUARY 10
Miss Nellie Schmidt, of San Francisco; Miss Vivian
nf'i1, ,ot, Portland: Tom. Kelly, Valerlo Sisters.
David Rafael & Co., Phil La Tosiia, Pantagescope,
Orchestra. The Four Soils Brothers. Popular prices.
n.aw.ico uaitjr. ijuAos ana uirat now iuicnnv.rn.
Phones
4 UNEQUALED
. VAUDEVILLE
A-2236, Main 4636. Curtah 2:30. 7:15, 9.
BELMONT'S OFFHl
SPIIEI
The actfve business man Is really benefited by a
luncheon hour spent at the Imperial Grill. Not
only -does the carefully prepared food prove
nourishing- and easily digested, but the qule
calm surroundftigs tend to refresh him for aa
afternoon's work.
t
t;?4t. L. Table d'Xote Lnsoheoa SO eta.
M
ortgage
oonci I
ssue
Cash Payment, for Quiet Sep
aration of Ethel Lorraine
and Son Too Small.
New York, Feb. 10. It was learned
that' Mrs. Ethel Lorraine Belmont, the
show girl bride Of iliaymond Belmont,
son of the financier, filed her suit for
Reparation and alimony because she re
fused pointblank to accept the offer
made her by the Belmont family to sub
mit to a quiet separation. The offer is
stimatejlvariouslyfronLJ10.Q!)JL jto
foO.000. The young woman held out for
a larger auto, Wlfen her demands were
declared to b out ,0f proportion, over
tures ceased and the suit was filed.
Mrs. Belmont Uncertain that every
court will sustain her and is Banguine
of seeing another offer come from the
iseimont family. Meanwhile she is writ
ing to Raymond and he is writing t6 her.
ins letters are said to be wonderful
examples of devotion and Mrs. Belmont
admits that she "likes Raymond more
than anyone In the whole world."
' ' ' i Hi , ii I i i .
AUTOMOBILE BANDITS
REAPPEAR IN NEW YORK
New Tork, Feb. lO.Thren men
alighted from a red limousine in front
of the Douglas Shoe store at Fourteenth
Street and Broadway at 11 o'clock Sat
urday night,' entered the store, covered
we bookkeeper with revolvers, scraped
$400 In coin and currency which he had
been counting into a sack and made
their escape. , A clerk rushed out of the
store and gave; the alarm while the men
were' still there, but they got away be
fore the police arrived.
The Journal for the finder,
And that la how Mr. Bates
covered the watch, which he lost
because he fogot to wear a chain
and Ms foot slipped.
The Journal nuhllstiea Tat a
.an3Tound'aamtlsementTfre'e,"""
with the understanding that the
loser pays only in case the ar-i
tlcla Is recovered. .
Jf o Council " Session Wednesday. .
Because of the fact that next Wednes
day, being Lincoln's birthday, has been
declared a legal holiday,' the city coun
cil will not transact 'any- business on
that date. Acting Mayor Baker will
call the council to order, however, and
ait adjomrnmene-wilt e-taken-:ttHTrinr4
day morning. '
TO CTTRB A COM iw OUTB SAT '
Take LAXATIVE WUOMO Quinine Tnb
ltR. pruiririBts refund money if tt falls
Er W. CIIOVE'S Signature tia box. . 26o.
sw 1st friist ffnrnpnnjf
OKEQaV HOTELS OREGON HOTELS
fTrn ABSOLUTELY
TOE HIMIffl
Which would you prefer, one of 10 notes of $500 each, all equally secured
(and due at 'the same time) by a mortgage on cloae-ln Improyed property
worth $10,000. and sinned by a substantial buaineai man: or An nnf fn tcrvrt
secured by a mortgage on a single bungalow, worth $1000, and signed byje1!
man of small means?
ThirH an3
Washingtorj
Fuaa-ritoos;
,
PORTLAND'S
GRANDEST
HOTEL
100 rooms .... ...... $1.00 per day
100 rooms,.. $1.50 per day
200 rooms, with bath $2.00 per day
100 rooms, with bath $2.50 per day
Add $1.00 per day to above prices
when two occupy one room.
VERY ATTRACTIVE PRICES
FOR PERMANENT GUESTS "
H.'C. BOWERS. Manager.,
GAINER THIGPEN, . Asst. Ma ir,
ISO TE9E HEART OF-TMIE OlaTV'
, NOTE OUR RATES: 1
R oom with , Bath Privilege ? . . . ... . .$1.00 UP '
' Twer Person-; r v:7V iawn: .$1.50 UP
Room With Private Bath ,$1.50UP
Two Persons . . ' $2.50 UP
- L. Q. 8WETLAND1, MGR.
'Permanent Rates on Appl cation
hi I 'in .-T-m1 J.." Jto .i i XiH 1 1 'n mi
Si
Si -
MM
1
Portland Famous Motel
H K.C1A1CKE, A if3"
jgTijtsr Cuisine. Eungpcaaplai)