Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 18, 1914)
THE OREGON SUNDAY "JOURNAL5. PORTLAND, SUNDAYMOR JLATION FATE NOW .GING AHEAD (in State Ex- las Increased Census Taken, tSE 170,091 by ths Portland Multnomah's as 76,806. regon. Have four, alns in population r years, according by the promotion Portland Commer- publlc yesterday. wince the last de- 170,091. of which Increase was iwere found by the to be responsible In Morrow, Jose Hood River coun ' tountles .fared, accord- and square mile area, th following table: Rooster Bums From Enid to Chickasha Oklahoma Bird "BldH ths Bodi" 4 Acquire Reputation of Only "Boom er" Chicken in ths World, CTilckasha, Okla., Oct. 17. "I have seen a lot of 'boomers in my time, but I have never seen a boomer chicken until now," said Mike Crowley, vet eran Rock Island engineer,' as he alighted from the cab of his engine in the Chickasha yards. "Look under there and you'll see the only 'boomer chicken in the world," continued Crowley. "That bird has been riding with me all the way from Enid" Crowley pointed under the engine. There in a crevice of the trucks hud dled a small battle-scarred rooster, of uncertain breed, besmeared with coal dust, but otherwise apparently in per fect condition. Engineer Crowley ex plained that as he was oiling his en gine in Enid on the southern trip he noticed the chicken perched on a rod underneath the locomotive. He did not molest the "hobo." but climbed down at tTl Reno and found the rooster secure as when he had pulled out of Enid. At Chickasha, the end of his run, it took the concerted efforts of three ne groes, employes at the roundhouse, to catch the "bum" after the rooster had been routed from his perch beneath the engine. "I'm going to take him home and give him to my kid," said Crowley, "and I'm going .to name hirtl 'Boomer.' " PIONEER FURNITUR FIRM TAKES; LEASE ON BIG HOLTZ STORE Henry Jenning & Sons Se cure New Quarters for Expanding Business, NEW CHAPTER IS BEGUN History of Growth of Enterprise Xilnked With Growth of the City of Portland. Population, i a V t . i ...ik i .... 1 .v ..I "HUH ,i4,ap, la a. ' i t ngton , H . "- . A Is 1914. 21,281 14.045 38,711 24,000 13.39S 23.131 J7.K9S 2.83 19.7F.2 s,3rr. 6,619 7,91 i 27,369 8,446 12,260 5,378 38,r.80 7,211 26,680 11,766 47,948 4,179 303.067 J7.437 3.870 7,719 23,8119 17,181 9,21 1 19,189 26.428 2,592 22,697 842.856 1919. 18,076 10,663 29,931 16,106 10.C80 17.959 9,315 2,044 19,674 3,701 5,607 4.059 8.016 25,75 9.567 8.554 4,658 83,783 fi.587 22.662 8,601 39,780 4,357 226,261 13,469 4,242 6,266 20,309 I6.19t 8,361 16. 336 21,522 2,48 . 18,2X5 672.765 Land Area, Acres. 1,958,400 440,320 1,192,960 625,440 423,680 1,041,920 4,977,920 958.720 3,150,080 768,640 2,892,800 6,357,120 347.520 1,815,040 1,120,640 3,839,360 5,068,800 2,951,680 645,120 1.433.520 6,325,120 764,160 1.296,000 288,640 453,760 535,040 720,000 2,030,720 1. 335,680 i!,01 2,800 1,499,520 476.840 1,090,560 456,960 CI, 188,480 Thirty-seven years ago, Henry Jen ning, Sr., came to Portland and went into the furniture business with a few dollars capital. Yesterday Henry Jenning & Sons signed a 15 year lease with the Mead estate for the big nine story Holtz store building at Fifth and - Washington, -.the hub of j Portland's business district. There ! they will soon move their big Second; and Morrison street store and within six weeks open at the hew location and start another chapter In the progressive history of the pioneer firm,: At the present time the firm uses four floors in the building they oc cupy and two additional floors in the annex to display their goods. In the new location they will have double the floqr space they now have, and expect to need it all for the rea son that their policy will be to do a volume of business and handle every class of trade. Business Grows Steadily. "Things are quite different with me today than when I first came to Portland," said Henry Jenning, Sr. yesterday in announcing that the lease had been signed. Since 1 came to Oregon, 37 years ago, I have been blessed with three sons Fred O., Charles and Henry Jr., my youngest, who is 32 years old. My business has prospered. It has grown larger with each succeeding year, and now that we have secured the big build ing at Fifth and Washington, at a very reasonable rental, I look for It to grow more. "While we have a re moval sale in progress here. Fred, my eldest . son, will go east and secure a new and larger stock preparatory to the opening of the old. firm in Its new hom. V . " - ' ' . '; j Mr.' Jenning la a native of Canada and is 60 years of age. He ascribes much of his success in the furniture business to the fact that be was given a thorough training in the fur niture business from the workman's bench up. He knows furniture from the forest to the drawing room. Had Humble start. "And they trained them when I was a youngster," he exclaimed. "When I was learning how to make furni ture, as an apprentice, I was paid the splendid wage of J20 for my first year's work, $30 for the second and 50 for the third 100 for three years' work. I ate, slept and dreamed of my work. After I had completed my apprenticeship I went from place to place looking for the best shops to increase my knowledge. Finally I ar rived at Toronto and there got a job with the Johnson Semo people. I got $1 per day, but at the end of two weeks they raised me to 11.50 per day and then I was made foreman of the factory at $15 a week. At the time I was 19 years old and the wage was high for those days." But he was dissatisfied, and finally throwing up his Job he came to the United States and worked through the east and south and driven onward by wanderlust, finally came to Oregon. Here his sons were born and he laid the foundation of his fortune and created the firm which stands among the. first pf the city's big business enterprises. With a few dollars he established a small furniture; store in a room 14 by 40 feet, at First and Columbia. hen he started out and began to hustle for jobbing business. One of the first sales he made to an out of town furniture man was at HUlsboro, where he found the proprietor work ing on a casket. looking for Greater Things. Meanwhile his business grew In Portland. He moved to First and Salmon streets into quarters measur ing 40 by 65 feet, then he moved to a place near First and Washington and finally the Mead estate built him a building at Front and Morrison, where he remained 12 years. At the time this structure, which still stands was the largest in the city. The preseat quarters of the firm at Second and .'Morrison have been oc cupied by it for eight years and Mr. Jennning has been out of the whole sale end of the business for 10 years, and now, he says, he "is pleased to announce that he is back in a building owned by the Mead estate," builders of the first big home for the store. "But what pleases me more than anything else, though," he concluded, "is that -myself and sons by moving into the heart of Portland's business district will be able to work toward bigger and better things." Edison's Latest Acnievepient :; g TO HEAR H The World s Greatep Artists 1 4 On the World's Greatest Musical Instrument The Edison Diamond Disc IS TRULY WONDERFUL 9 '" Call and ask to hear this latest and most marvelous achieve ment of Mr. Edison GraVeS MusiC CO. Pioneer Music Dealers Established 1895. i'tj 151 Fourth Street Bet. Morrison anicl Alder Streets Land Area, Pop. Square Per. feq. Miles. Mile. 3,060 7.0 688 20.5 1,864 20.8 821 29.2 662 20.3 1,6;8 142 7,778 2.3 1,498 1.9 4,922 4.0 1,201 3.2 4,520 1.4 9,933 7 543 14.6 2,836 9.6 1,751 4.8 5,999 2.1 7,920 .7 4,612 8.4 1.008 7.2 2.243 11.9 9,883 1.2 1,194 40.0 2,025 , 2.0 451 672.0 709 24.6 836 f 4.6 1,12r 6.8 3.173 7.R 2,087 ' 8.2 3,1 4o 2.9 2,343 R.2 731 36.2 1,704 1.5 714 31.8 lnd;area 9B.607 area 1.092 Hi...: V 96,699 iiinir pur B'luane mile iann area 8.8 b tablt Tvill be inrluded in the forthcoming issue of the Oregon Almanac able to discus the cam- 14 west with far less free- ;lish Censorship : Still Very Strict n lims Military Correspondent i E- a'islaa Papers Ort More Hews a r.rittsh Contemporaries. i i . donl Oct. 17. In a comparison Veiforshlp, as it Is being applied ?Und and Russia, the Timts' mii torr.espondent says: ;in tK. ihan; our Russian contemporaries. RuBSli. the last home of liberty press, has become po-sitlvely ble ;jto" us In England. 'Russian ts.(lre far more full than ours tuslan'eomment Is far more un nclled nd therefore more ilium- e shall have a pood deal to say : Eljglish cffcsorship when the lib of the press Is restored, but no ioufets that in the present critical i of operations in the west Gen Joffre Is reaily justified in exer t dictatorship in news and rom . 'It Is normal for all dictators to trustful of their closest friends, wejhave no muse to complain if Ilctators treat ns after the man. f their kind." Xdu-ge Attendance Drawn. e" T. M. C A. classes in public ilngr have drawn large attendance the start and several new mem- have been enrolled at each ses- The advanced class will meet to- ow; night at o'clock and the ele ar students Tuesday night at - 2"he association has planned a )ifD course In the subject for th (nts i and purposes to develop it 'rtalry through the winter session. Mary Garden Will Go to Battlefield Grand Opera star Joins Xsd Cross and Will Aid Wotmded French Soldiers at the Trout. London, Oct. 17. Mary Garden has abandoned the gTand opera stage for the time being and Is going to tin front as a Red Cross worker. She has just returned to London after having spent the summer in Scotland, and looks prepared for any eventuality After seeing her mother and sister off for America she will proceed to Paris to take up her new duties. "I may never sing, again, she said, 'and I don't care, f am intensely In terested in my new work and am im patient for relaxation. Having had n experience in nursing, I shall have no hospital work to do, but I shall help to move the wounded from the battle fields. "Dangerous? Tes. Bnt what does it matter? I am not afraid. I am a fatalist. If it is destiny, what mat' ter? I might as well die from a bul let as from any other way. At least I will be doing something useful, and that is sure to count in the final sum. ming up. "I expect to be at the front with the French troops next week. If I come through It alive, perhaps I shall he able to sing better than e-ver before. The experience win at least be broadening." Cholera in Germany. London, Oct. 17. The North Ger man Gazette admits the appearance of cholera in Germany as well as in Austria, says a Rome dispatch to Reuter's Telegram company, but as sures the public that the outbreak Is well In hand. pe Old Reliable Union WE GIVE $2 WORTH OF DENTISTRY FOR EVERY $1 YOU PAY US infraction Painless ( ' y Plates 'vOrW I , 8. , g v .& .. You Will Not Get Hurt If You Find This Number 23114 MORRI SON ST. COR. SECOND Plates $5 Sr. Whetstone ' v . READ THESE PRICES Porcelain Crown $3.50 Gol$ Fillinjjs ?1.00 22-k. Gold Crowns $3.50 22-k. Gold Bridge f3.SO Silrer Fillings ....... ... k SO 15 -Year Written Guarantee Lady Attendants UNION PAINLESS DENTISTS, Inc. ';..-';', -t 9r. Wnststons. vgr. j.'0: ; 231 Morrison Street, Corner Second Entire Corner .r Open Evenings and Sunday Mornings From 10 to 12 Tnir for the Big Union SignJSISZSZZSSIZ Most Extraordliiniary Furniture Anmoiuiiiicemeinit .Ever Made in Portland ! oim Molt tore At noon yesterday, we signed a fifteen year lease for the ten story Holtz building, at 5th and Washington streets. It is the first, move in our plan for the establishment of the greatest fur niture institution in the Northwest. We must vacate our present building on November 15th. Think what that means the mov ing of a giant furniture store in less time than was ever attempted in Portland's history! o n ;ms at Engot o Clloclk Soarp 'ommoirrow (Moeday) Mormiog Fred O. Jenning leaves tomorrow morning for Grand Rapids and the Eastern market to pur chase the finest and most complete new stock of furniture ever brought to Oregon. The pres ent stock will be sold out at marvellously low prices. This is the first sale in our 37 years of furniture business. We have never believed in sales unless for a legitimate reason. Here is the greatest opportunity you have ever known. Hundreds of Thousands of Dollars of Fine Furniture, Carpets, Stoves and Homefurnishings Slaughtered Prices on hundreds of articles will be cut right in half many staple lines actually reduced 33 1-3 and 25 per cent. This advertisement was prepared hurriedly. We, did not have time or space to mention prices. Come when the store opens tomorrow morning, prepared for the greatest savings you have ever wtinessed. Heiniirv Corner of Second and Morrison Streets mi IfU m III!