v1 3 w THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND. SUNDAY HORNING, OCTOBER. 3. ' 1913. (ijjiTiDaw: SERiES DF LECTURES VitEK'S VOLUME OF EASTERN INVESTORS r . MAKE PURCHASES OF IMPROVED ASSESSMENT METHODS NEEDED REAl? ESTATE SALES I..MIKIIAN I KM "V;t B. H. nu-cnir ' .? aaeuHO : . oo eaoo 1 TELEPHONE CO.'S SKYSCRAPER OFFjCE BUILDIWQ C 'I . K r - -SI aatsksW Tss i a.. Br 1 - . I'll 1 'f.,-:".--s 1 r " - V" How Plan' of Assessing Prop erty Valuations Will Be Ex plained to Taxpayers of City , Following1 correspondence extending t ever several whIu AiiMior Henry SL Reed has arranged to bring aa expert , front Cleveland, Ohio, to deliver a ser ' i lea of lectures before the civic erganl f nations of - Portland on the - merits of th Comers' system of realty valua tion Having made, thorough lnves ; tlgatlon of - tha Soman system, Asses- sor Bead ha become convinced that It ; Je the fairest and beat aystam of asses I lag property In use la thla oountry. and ha l anxious to hav It adopted in this . laity and mgwMAiW-w&ytSv;- : 5 Ths Cleveland xprV said Assessor Iteed yesterday., "will arrive in port- .land. -upon my invitation, about Novm ' bar la. Ho will bo hr week or mora and will deliver at laaat half a dosan addressee which will ba fraa to all who : may wish to attend. " I ahaU ba Clad to : anas arrangement for tha expert to ap ipear before tha Portland Realty Board, I tha Taxpayer" league, th East Bid I Business Men's club, or any other civic ; body, interested w aaseeameni ana iax i at ion. . fvj'-:''',;;"j4,; t "Along with tha general movement f or wore efficient tnethodo In : govern i roent which la manifest all over tha country, tha Question of taxation la re ceivlng IU full anaro or attention, more Attention la now being paid to thla lm ; portent subject then at any other time . in the history of 'the united state. : With the view to Improving their math' pan of assessment, number of eaatern cltle hav lnatalled tha Somera' Unit system. Among theaa plaoaa are Clara land and Columbus. Ohio: HL faUL i Jllnn., Denver, Colorado; Galveston and Houston, Texas; pm Honea, aows, ana Philadelphia, In part. : s . ..; : ' ' . jby community opinion tha unit value of front foot one foot wide and 100 root deep in tha. center of each of tha four aidea of a cltv block. Thla much ao eompllsbed, tha value of all tha land tn that block la astabllehed by the appli cation of mathematical table. BcientJflo tnaihmta r aian nrovlded for arriving at building values. Th system we i rirst applied at St. Paul. It long alnea passed tha experimental stage and haa given .aaUafacUon wherever introduced. The Somera' ayatem for valuing land 1 and building haa many adherent la ! Xortland. ' Information regarding lte . working haa heretofore bean obtainable 1 tmly In a limited way through the pub j llcatlons of the cltiea which hav in a tailed th ayatem.' The visit of - tha omer export next month will giro Portland people full opportunity to I ! know all about tha system and etudy i Its merits at cloaa range.? Tha addraaaa of the expert ahould ba attended by all ! who are Interested la taxation,- v , ' New . Process of. . Little Cost May Be Used to'-Protect i Steel Structures From Rust. Silver plated akyserapar and monster atael bridges, like Portland' Broadway ; viaduct, plated with allver. are not far , off, if the report which come from , England 1 true, that a new electroplat 1 Ins; process haa been discovered that Will reduce tha coat of electroplating to a mere fraotion of preaent day math eds. , , '-!. 1,1 a . Thl Ig truly an ago of engineering ' wonder. But recently It was officially i announced that an Austrian electrician , had developed a method of electroplat ing with atno at a trifling cost, and now aa Englishman oomea along and ays ha haa a way of coating ateel with allver. thus protecting it from rust and ' other corrosive agenciea, and riving It perpetual Ufa. for .be It known, that steel haa but two enemiea rust and electricity and also or silver will save It from both. . , The proceea of electroplating with f ither xlnc or silver are said to ba ao trident and cheap that it ia commer l Mally practicable to - galvanise great t rldge girders and tha tons upoa tona ' of ' structural steel , used - la modern ' building. ' It 1s also claimed that largo surfaces can now bo plated with lead or aluminum and that new methods will 'reduce tha cost of ordinary tin plating I by .nearly or quite SO per cent. - . Manifestly, if me new process juan fles the clalma mads for it, eapeolally as to cheapness, tha praotlos of andoa lag tha stool frames of skyscraper tn concrete will soon ba a thing of tha past. 5s iv.v'-v '.'"'?'.' - - Electro plating of tha steal girders of bridges will supplant painting, the only known moans of protecting; them gainst mat. Experience tends to show 1 nat paint is a very uncertain protec tion, a cheap method of electro plat ing; steel with rust proof metal will en rure longer life to all forms of steel construction and Inoreased safety to tha .PUbUfc;v-5S!;.V::v.Va;5:.? i :asterh and western 0.1EG0N MEN TRADE LAND ! t ... ...... ,.'.,-. ! h-l' y j f v Oscar Colpltt who Uvea a short dls ! 3 nee from Forest drove, has traded hie ! m c rune ranch 'to a resident of En- lerprlBe, Wallowa county, for 177 acres f irriraUd land la the vicinity of En- trprlsa Colpltf a holdings conslat of El acres, and la the trade he sold SI crea at the rate of $500 aa aore, acres ' at $1000 an acre, and acres at $(00. I i n. acre.' All of this land is 1ft prunes, t ihouah only a portion of it is In bearing j j ondltioni the rest being but on year 1 ? hi. imp aoxves 10 musiraie in vaiue f Crenon prune land.; Mr. Colpltt j : o"'.ht the place four years ago, and 1 st . from making a living oa it dur- ! . x um time he has cleared over $4000. : ::AT0R-UNEmL SEND GARDEN SEEDS 'V'y fVnator Harry Lan has wired The .urnul to state that any on desiring vfinraent vegetable or flower seeds Is :tl to write him at Waahlngton, D. .. ntsttnf what seeds ar desired, Th t of coUecUng these seeds front the , - mental axperlnent etaUona ha t 1 "in completed, and th products . at th disposal of th people, j . OF SiWSCRAPERS IS r said; to be probable .. $ s. " 1 t: . -o.,V ' , ' ' - i ' ' ' -- - - 'iD ' " ' """" ' i's x S I l 1 : r ' ; 'i . ! l " ""' """""r' ' "! Steel frame of Faciflo Telephone tt Telegraph company. 11-etory build v , -j loght Park and Oak streets. ' .. 1 ''-' CET.ff DEPOSITS IN T OF One Near, Roseburg and Other Near Marquam Are Given Tests by Experts."; BuDeUn 121. recently Issued br the tJhited- BUta Geological survey, eon- tains the following report on Portland ement deposits in Oresoni v 0 fw M , . -wear Bosshurg. Ponglas oountv. four miles from the Southern Paclfio t rail. road. deposits of lnneatona anl ah.l. have recently bean investigated by pri- vai paruea ana u flats noted below piaced at tne disposal of the survey. no limestone is a dark gray 1 fine grained aense rocx. out hv muv uni of calolte. (The ahale is a vrv hard dark (ray material and is also cut by nne seams ox calotte v. i rs jv "Tha raw materials are reported: to be ample In quantity and of uniform com position. Coal and water Dower ant also said to ba not far distant, and tha to pography is favorable to tha construc tion of a reservoir for, collecting sur face water from tha surrounding hill a Tha composition Of .llmeatena n shale Indicate . that they should be mixed la ' the proportions of annnm. mately 40 pounds of the former to 100 pounds . of the latter.. . Tha raw,, ma terials were ground and burned to a clinker in an experimental rotary kiln, and ths clinker was ground to such s fineness that ( par cent passed 100 mesh sieve and (S per cent passed too mesh sieve, " The initial set began in two hours and set hard after four hours. "An Impure limestone having nearly tha composition of a cement rock un derlies a narrow area of perhaps 100 seres - about a mile from Marauam. Clackamas county. The cock considered to be workable ranges from 10 to Si feet thick, The locality is about lx miles from the Southern Paclfio railroad. ' "Near Dallas, ; Polk county, I.t miles from the Southern Paclfio railroad, ia a small deposit of sllloeous limestone overlying basalt The deposit is lentic ular, nss been drilled to depths of ! to to fast and is 100 to 1500 feet wida Chemical analysis shows that It carries IS to tl per cent of silloa, 4 to 11 per cent of Iron oxide, B to I nor cant of el. bumlna, ( to Tt per cent of carbonate wma. ann a.ia w a.e per cent of Ford Automobile plant pnder cont OREGON SUBJEC GOVERNMENT REPORT I ASSEMBLING AUTO FACTORY COVERING EAST, SIDE BLOCK f aniorceo; concreU conttructloa and will cost approximately $100,000, " . , . - - MIS SI TO ; POSSESS GREATEST FARM IN THE WORLD Premises Require Five Days to Ride Around .Only 6000 of : 25,000 Acres Cultivated. : " Tha farm of Joseph O. Thompson, lo cated In th , famous "black heir of South'AIa,bma:ots said to be the larg est ih the world, IV comprises 18,000 acres and Is aald to, be the moat fertile Und in this country.'; If this farm ware cut lnto clty.lots, there would be 00.- 000, enough to build a city of 1,400.000 Inhabitants, Crurlng six, to the family. Two hundred miles of wire encloses the farm, . it takes the man who in spects the fence nvs days to ride around it on horseback. , To properly care for the farm 1200 are employed, who with their families, make a population larcar wan tne average AJanama city. Two hundred and thirty ploughs are always In use, - -,v y.;, .,-,- ;"V..v-...iv. AH the farm is not under cultivation. Just now only 1000 acres are planted. In aa ordinary season this yields 1500 bals of cotton, 15,000 bushels of corn, i,ooo nuoneis of oats, f 00 tons of hay, (00 tons of alfalfa and 11.000 gal lon of syrup. Beside all this there are on the farm 100 bead of cattle and nearly as many hogs. .-..., ...y-oivv. Mr. Thompson is called the king farm er of Alabama. ; There are cattlemen in the west and ia other parts of the world who own more acres, but they are mere ly pasture and not farms. , v y- , HARRIMAWS SUMMER ; HOME IS SUBDIVIDED s Pelican Bay Lodge, the famous east ern Oregon summer home of the late 8. K. Harriman, has been subdivided and is to be sold to people dealring to es tablish summer homes in that delight ful region - in ? Klamath county. The property now, belongs to W. P. and 8. Q. Johnson, who have had It surveyed Into waterfront lot and acre tract a. ..: bonate at magnesia. This rock could be used for Portland cement manufacture Onlv hv mix In It with a hlrh nlxlnm oar-stone such as that af Roseburg. ruction at East Eleventh and Division Ladd Estate Co. v Makes; Sale -for$21,500r Other Realty .": .Transactions , ; Much more than the average volume of realtv dealing was reported last weosythe dally average of tranaf era rued for record exceeding 180,000 for tne ,nrst time since the early sum' mer. win . priced reaidence proper ties preaommatea la the Ceallnr. The moat Important aale of the week was c that purchased by Jacob Rosen thal of the aast half of lota 1 and t, in block tP. city, comprising a full lot at the southwest corner of Colum bia and Broadway The property was soldi by the Ladd Estate company f or f 11.800. ':V ':. 51 k 4 , Kirk Hoover took title to a Tl foot tot on Williams avenue near Stanton treat The site 1 lmoroved with s business building and. was sold by W. Mf jsoais f ror i,ooo. " 4 x . A' ajrsj u xrvtagtoa, K ; It' I Sohmeer sold to N. T. Palmer tha narth half af .1am II anil IS In block 17, Irvington. comprising a (0 foot lot Improved and located at the southwest corner of Bast Twenty fourth and Tillamook 'Streets:, conald erauon 17100. ; ' . . - - . Lot a, block It. Kiasal Park, was sold by J. 8. Crane to, BL .U' Palfrey for H.OOO. . This nrofSrty Is located on th Baa Line road near the termt- nu of the Montavllla ear Ulna, Ellers Music House nurchaaed from John C. Foley a parcel 100 by 100 feet,! located near the . southwest ' cor ner of Third .and Wood street South Portland, for 11400.?- Dr. J. 1 J. panton nurchaaed t It It 100 root lot improved with a modern dwelling. ' located at the northwest corner of Bast Eleventh and Thomp son streets. The property is located In Xrvlngtoa and was sold by Mrs, Elisabeth C MoComb for 17000. : i Mndsaee Property 8018;".,., Mrs. Maude B. Raamussen has sold to Abram T. Wright a house and lot facing Larch street 100 'feet south of Mulberry, Ladd's addition, - for 1(500. i u The Fred A. "Jacobs eomnany renorta the following recent sales of residence property! My-.;" " George W. Baldwin to Mrs, Alice B. Duniway, a house' and let in Ladd's addition for " t(250. - , - 1 Hulda Levins to W. B, 1 Wharton, t- f B. Wharton, t-l room house at corner of East Twenty- suth .and ' Caruthars , streets. ., . Con sideration 15000, Metropolitan Investment and Un I provement company to El J. ' Karr, ' t- room houss In ManitoUt ttOOO. r : u ;: J. B. Dickover to Welbke Krohn, r id en Co lot on Portland Heighta, M0 00. j iu. urans naa aoia w axrs. Tcaoia Klcea a new house and" 10 by 100 foot lot described as lot II In block It. piedmont. ConslderaUon 14000. F. B. Bowman has sold to Elisabeth Kara Potter lot IT in block 5, Irv ington, for f 10,500. The lot Is In proved with- a - modern two story real dence of 1 attractive type ' which Just been completed,': . SUTR0 BATHS TO BE"1 " . ; SOLD UNDER HAMMER 8aa Francisco, Oct ! 8utro Batha, the largest swlmnarng baths In the world, are to be sold under the hammer November 10 . Baldwin ' Howell have been aathorised to carry out the ar rangements for the aaje and the prop erty will pass into the possession v of the highest bidder and go forever out of tha bands of the heirs of Adolph Su- too. .0.,-.-yv Ve . - V The" property te' be disposed of1 y (he Sutro heirs Includes the buildings and tanks, frean. water springs. chlnary, power house and all the equip ment. . The property- covers approxi mately eight acres of land. The . mu seum may also be sold. With the defeat laat year of the nron- esltlon to have the city Uk over the property, the last hop ef the people ever aequirlnf the grounds and the. famous Heights" vanished and tha many Sntro heirs clamored for a divis ion of the esUte, and now the baths are to be sold at public auction. FroereaslTesl Are Btur,',. Walla Walla. WashJ Oct 18-Offteara of the . Progressive league of Walla Walla county have been elected, and the work for the coming yaar ha. been ba gun .sin vearnestyfiThe offioers v-ares President E. R. Orm.bee; vice president BL H. Nixon 1 secretary. Mrs. J. CL HnrsI poolt treasurer, T. a Elliott Meeting ef the league will be held monthly, , The questloa of transferring the na- tlonal headquarters of the Journeyman Tailors union front Bloomlngton, X1L, 10 inaisuapous, ma., nas been left to a referendum vot of the members. streets. The etructuro Is of xe- 4vort ut a I ri ' l 4ttn fUTensat, (SrAX j I X l a0O aavouMP 1 eieHN KCToei , joofo t tMOeaawa f r- ia-a .1 M A It A$' ".m '- S 81800 ' l 3 , :? "Iv'"' tV iaoOeaeue,l J , , tl dfOoHO , I 1. . a 1 . a 1 r I "T"T 1 t tt 1 9 880 aeeuap 1 ' . I 5 l J . war 11 f. - I 111 11' ,r . ir . a 1 1 " 1 ; v, 1913 hseesament of BubdJvlfiloDj ,ln , . . - park. r . .i- t Tha - elevated east aide v section on either side of Belmont street, and ex tending eastward from East Fifty-fifth street to Mount Tabor. Is attracting mora than ordinary - attention among that - class- cf Portland resident who are able to . maintain expensive homes. One . sale, was recently mada In that district at approximately 1150 a front root, yet none of it is assessed zor tnora than 1S a foot. 1, J, Tha Laldlaw home, a block too leet square,: located on the' north' id of Belmont at East Fifty-eighth street, was sold laat weak to Dr. J. N. Coghv lan for.-14,000. : Assuming - that the improvements are worth 116,000, the fLISSOFKIS MESSAGE BROUGHT B ENGLISH) LECTURER Representative of New Garton ' Foundation Declares Armies ;and Navies Are Ruinous. -: . Bernard Noel Langdon-Bavles, M. JL, of Cambridge university, who la making a four months', tour of Americs, in the S. a Sh.-'MM Vwaawllasla ' WslAaa tfhfa -rZ" - -TT IMuon, "e wf'V London, is to be In Portland November if and it. He wiU lecture against war at Reed College and other places in the city. ' ' ' vM'-vy: y1"'?.; v ' Several years ago a book entitled The Au minion" wu nubllshed by Nor man AnxelL aa English journalist real- dent in Paria, Blnoe that tlm hun- kflreds of thousands of people nave reaa Ensnano. TJZZZZ TO organisauon waa . lormw j W l." LTSJ JZEZSZ -MBW"?VrTJ v Ir?,7. the Right Honorable lSS mw. 'ifV' P!S manent member of the committee t imnarial defense: Sir Richard Oarton, great London banker, and Norman An- salt -r 1 -. 'Vi";y""'. Today, tnrougn tne meaiiun m ifo- turee, international politgr . club and study circles, the ideas are permeating the publto mind of England and reach ing out to Germany, France and other European countrlea. It Is to promulgate these t vlewa .that . Mr. Langdon-Davies has com t our country.. ....... Xrmoaa Armaments Bulanua. His . message Is thla: ; Th civilised nations of the earth are today ruining themaelve with their enormous armies and navies. In Europe, as In America, the burden of taxation is ever oa the In crease, and the mass of that taxation Is for- war, and the munitions ox war, neither of which will benefit the 11 ves of the peoples. All sane men who think are aarreed so far. Hitherto there have been two sets Of proposals for solving the difficulty. Either th nation- must arm. in accord anee with the militarist Idea, cr it must follow the old plan of the older pacific ists, who teach the doctrine of brotherly love. The new plan accepts neither of these two positions although it recognises th good points contained In the old pacific ist plan. It presents the conception of a new pacificism, and It 1 thlt 'War is Billy, and. armaments' are ailly, be cause y today civilised nations cannot reach by them the objects for which they go to war." It then sets cut. to prove on a purely eoonomlo basis and in a purely logical manner thatlwar da- feats ts -own purpose. , Mr. Langdon- Danes nas epitomised u thus: y r WTiy Defense Is trnnooessary. "All nations of the world ate arming. and all assert that they are arming in self-defense. Defense Is unneceaaary, unless some on la going to attack. No one will attack, unless he has a motive for attack. The only possible motive is the desire to reap the fruits of con quest-:' It can be demonstrated that as between 1 civilized natlona today, there can be no fruits of conquest that in th twentieth oentury that it 1 a harvest that cannot be reaped, v .- . . . "If that faot can be ahown blearlv to Jhe putllo mind' of all nations, then presto! the motive for attack, the need for defense, the burden of armaments, tha dangers of war Will have vanished. and th stag will be dear for coopera tion, ror tn arbitration of disputes, for T, kte P fcBT iteoeMMo , m sioo m H haakV r - liOO sun .: as4ooeuo BLOCK -Crt" O m 1 3., 8 st400oawwMo 824 00. eaewnn' 8a50a;owiO " 5cvh er 1 Bell wood and Mount Tabor Central price Of .'the ground would ba I1O.000, while the assessment Is but IfitOO, or about IT "per cent of Its actual valua Tha Pabneykblock, 171 by tOO feet, on the opposite side of Belmont from the Laldlaw home, - Is 'understood to he held at' lto.000. It la .asseasod at 13600. The 200 feet immediately - west of the - Laldlaw block, belongins; to J. a Cook, is assessed at $4800. Its market .value i probably not lesa than four times, the aasessed , valua Tha 400 , feet of Belmont frontage belong ing to Harriet Clarke is assessed at 111 a. front foot It Is not believed that any. of the Clark property could be purchased for less than 160 a foot th united action to police undeveloped or rebellious peoples, and, more than all, for mankind's true war, the war with Nature, with th planet on which ha lives, with ths" social problems engen dered by vioe, ignorance, disease and all the .mysterious forces which . spread enough misery already, among the great ramiiy of mankind. . , ; -' - "The. new pacificists cay th Interna tlonal policy today Is almost Invariably based Upon Illusions. Illusion - whioh are evidenced1 by such false notions as that colonies are owned and can, there fore, be captured, that by annexing pop ulated , territory,' the annexing nation gains, that armaments 1 guarantee to make trade, that war preserves a virile race, that war can be made to pay by the exaction of tribute of Indemnity. Every one of these propositions the new pacificists deny, and are prepared to bring conelualv proof against them." Mr. Leagdon-Davie: engagements tn America are under the direction of the American Association for International Conciliation. President Foster, of Reed College, has charge of his engagement In Portland, and has arranged for him to speak at the assembly at Reed Col leg Tuesday, November II, at 11 o'clock. At 11:10 he is to address a Joint lunch son' of the Commercial, Rotary and Ad. clubs, ths "Realty Board, and th Pro gressive Business Man's league, at the Commercial Club. ? H will talk at $ o'clock at 'the ' Portland Academy, and at l a. m. at Washington high school On Mondsy, November IT, he wll de liver a ' lecture at the public library. This lecture will be under the auspices of the Oregon Peace society. ' Presldsnti WUIlaa . I, ..roster .-left Wednesday evening for a tour of the northwest. During his trip he will visit seversl Institutions of higher learning, and win make addresses at Washington Btat college, UnlvrUy - of : Idaho, Spokan County - Institute. Washington State : Normal and Washington State George B. Vincent president of the University of Minnesota, is 'to bo the Raise Yoiir Children under your own roof , Add, to your social and buisness ; prestige by ' living in your own home. 1 . ' ; ' ":;And at no greater monthly outlay while pay-' " Jngr for it than thefent of. an apartment or flat with double the comfort - 1 ' 1 r , ' ' You may ' have your $ own , home; now in any r part of the city you desire , V ,,' Learn of this plan in a few brief words and you will be confident of complete satisfacti6n. And (very . statement- all materials and all workmanship Is guaran- ' teed backed by the moral, and the financial ability of the officers of , , - . J " , . mi T rtV 'T-K al 1 . 1405 Yeon Eldg., Fifth Oliver K. Jfeffery, Pres. , , Old ' McCurdy ; Place, "H Near Brownsville, Goes to Wis ,,conSln'Man. ; ' Oeorg W. Edward has ' traded hi til aore farm on. Bruah Creak near . Brownsville, formerly the McCurdy place, , to : Julius Marx,' ef Wsupauoa, Wisconsin, (or Mr. Marx's 1X0 acre farm in Wisconsin. Th deal was made Tues- ' day and Involved $14,800. Mr. Edwards and family will move to "Wlsconela at once and lit. Marx end family will be come Oregon residents. - ' 1 , 4.'-..-f.,i mi, ,,- S 7" . ' "William V L'PPert A Junction City blacksmith,' recently sold a' $80 acr farm located near that plaoe, to Henry ' Korad, a Chicago investor, for $16,100, ' or $60 an acre.! The buyer plana to Im prove th place with a fin country res- , idence which he will occupy for a sum- mer home. . 1 .,-.' R. B. Green, a farmer from Sprague v Waah., has purchased $10 acres of -land ft located near Burn. Mr. Green 1 a prac tical farmer and will at once develop hi r Burn ranuh. . The property waa .sold by th Oregon eV Washington Colonlsa- . tion oompany, speaker at ths assembly ef November X Tti Piimnt ICvanta nlub mat Wadnea- day and disoussed the several questions which are to be voted on at the elec tion November 4, ' The club Is an organ isation ofr college alrla devoted to , the study of current , aetivltlee and prob lems In the social and political realm. The Comus club held , Its opening dance Friday evening. It was the most suooeaaful affair of Its kind over given at Reed. ' The -college . reception . hall was used for the occasion. Tasty re freshments were served. The oommlt-i tea In charge waa Kenneth Tomllnaoa, tloward Barlow and Joyce Kelly. :'..,, PORTLAND WOMAN BUYS , , WASHOUGAL PROPERTY , Mrs. William Morhoff af thib dty has purchased ths fine ranch at Waah- -ongal, Clarke county, Waah., formerly betlontidg to C H. Mahon. Th proper ty was sold at publio auction at Van couver, Wash, laat Saturday Mrs.-Jkf.or, hoff bid tt In at $10,000. , ; BUILDERS' AND FINISHERS' DIRECTORY . : rumiiuax mxraxaaia BOWIRs PARSOKa 1MH SToat, lUla T4I. - "erattnr beeplhili nevkliw. i'CRKITOaB fepeli, repolUhed, uiikolatered. imt ens wore, oil ror prices, mm aaes. f Law AMP OtAZrMtt TIMUS, CBE83 CO., 1M-1MI Sd St, rtosaol srnee.' Bins Mla or A-Z02S. ' - USUBASOS arOAKOAB. Batte Lively, Sot Xeaa kMs. grery orm ot Isnaiwe. ftomls, .... ibobt woaxa racurio icon woaxa . AU ArebltectorU Irea CasUaas. Aagle, Chaanels. XAXOSOArZ eAADinora Bsmi laoeaeaDfa -anaenaemi mi oiAico ri no A 1 nn ciiie. uiiiuu 1 miint Wi girt sirm. fACl 10 teattKa(e Uan. ;olus eooiwigr. IU' BoUieblH bids- Phonr Miwhsll xoa. OkKAJaXMTAX Wing AVTD 109' POailAAD W1BS AND IRON WOltUMlri at. AMhltwrtural wir end I ram. tt" " ' BA8MC88BN CO., 'Hlfb Btaadard" salat,. N. g. eoraCT -4 and Taylor. M.-A-1TT1.. " PIONKEB PAUiX CO, las 1st at,"Uala 1U1T A-T048. . . , -. pAiHinia Asm. AtKnia rAIMTIN-Paper baactaS. ttatfas. eanet i . lnlns. botlo prlc 6R saj laUweea 1 JeW4 W BTIIWWU JOdb QOOD work ar motto. A. Qitoiirm. Kn-rl.l mmLl 1 ; for botela. rf. 2U; E. 8008. m"" , lUU bMt were, bciow rihl, Mli P. i. CeaaaT S8 K. Whlngtoo. aw8d 1105. ! PXUiraiMO A5D rLTTKBIMO BtJPPLrSS BATH Tubs, sinks, ,' ianionea, - laaaarr pip, pipe fit-! V! oonireeung, f. Pbodc Mala BATH? tollata. bauna. boiler. tfMtlas, jobbln. M. , : ihjit kztal woaaa t 1AOOB IXMLf, abt DMtal works. . kotaV ' 1484. SIP rtret. bt. Oolnmbls end Tly are, 1 WALL TATtt MORGAN WAUi PAPBa. QOr-SaQ M aa be' ! wiMpowLkygrjiQ BXPKHT WINDOW CLEANKaA-T68, Alala I .. ahhi. an Hunt bM it ... , - ' v 7. and Alder, Portland - . C B. Hurtt, Mjr. 1 puunocua ,- a,