The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, November 28, 1920, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
HE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 28, 1920.
MODERN LIFT FOR
ED
FJ
Relic of Three Generations, , Run
by Waterpower, Doomed if
Legislature Acts on Suggestion
. Salem, Or., Nov. 27. The old
water power elevator, whicli has done
duty in the state capltol for mjjre
than 35 years, Is doomed to relega-
( tion to a back seat, if the ways
and means .committee of the forth
'coming legislative session looks with
favor on an item of $6500 for a mod
ern, electrically propelled elevator,
contained, in the budget for the
. maintenance of the capltol and su
preme court building and grounds,
ns filed by Secretary of State Kozer
Saturday.
A new coat of paint for the capitol.
at an. estimated coat of .3S391. the first
for six years, is also included.'
The' total estimated need for the
maintenance of the buildings and
grounds . for the two-year period is
fined at 199.399.00. This Includes $49.-6-'0'
for salaries for the 18 employes,
hii increase of J4620 over the appro--prlatlon,
of two years ago; $6000 for
general maintenance ; $25,000 for fuel,
light and water, an increase of $2500
ovcr-the figures of two years ago, and
$18,779.50 for replacements and repairs,
which include, besides the elevator and
paint, items, a new freight elevator for
the supreme court building, new win
dow shades for the supreme court
bnildlng, and new awnings for the capl
tol. The btfdget for the board of control,
as filed by R. B. Goodln secretary,
calls for a total of $20,550 $13,800 for
Halaries and $6750 for general main
tenance. W. K. Vinton of McMinnville, presi
dent of the Oregon senate, is by virtue
of his office and the absence of Gov
ernor Olcott. governor of Oregon, and
not merely the acting governor, as has
been reported, '.
Under the provision of the law passed
by, the special legislative session last
.January, the president of the senate
becomes governor, t with the full pow
ers of the regularly "elected executive,
upon, the "death, removal" from office
or absence from the state" of the gov
ernor. , This, however. Is not Vinton's first
experience as governor of Oregon, as
. lie had occasion to assume the title
and . duties Incident thereto several
times last year, when Olcott, at that
I ime both governor and secretary of
iltate. was absent from the.ntatn. When
Vinton comes to Salem Monday to re-
eeive'.the announcement of the official
canvass of the votes in the November
election, it will be the first time that
tt has been necessary for him to ap-
t"ir i ihb. cuuuoi in me Deriormanen
vl his duties as the state's executive.
i The development of 50 horsepower
for the generation of electricity and
the operation of a sawmill Is contem
plated by Charles F. Brumfield of
.Philomath. V who has applied to State
. Kngineer Cupper for permission to ap
propriate 40 second feet of water from
.the north fork of the Alsea river.
U K. Bean of Medford has applied
for permission to appropriate water
from a spring in Jackson county for
domestic use and for the irrigation of
15 acres of land.
, Jennie Tuttle of Salem has applied
for permission to appropriate water
from Thompson creek for the irriga
tion of 16 acres In Josephine county.
. -i.
Stock Train Bears
; Pure Breds, Total
Value Is $500,000
liugene, Nov. 27. Ivan T. Sparks,
"district freight and passenger agent,
lias returned from a trip to Ashland,
having accompanied one of the mbst
valuable stock trains that, ever went
.over the Southern Pacific This train
-was made, up of 2i cars of , pure-bred
stock from the International Livestock
tihow, on Its way to breeders scattered
through Western Oregon and Northern
i California.
He estimated roughly that the tralh
4oad would be appraised at half a mil
llon dollars and would be worth double
that amdunt to the stock industry of
thA tWO HtAfAfl. DtlA fDF fit thla hUk
. . v..u j ..WO iilgll-
grade stock was dropped . off at Eu
gene, bringing in breeding stock esti
mated to be. worth $25,000.
'S
STOVES and
RANGES
FACTORY BRANCH
FACTORY PRICES
DIRECT TO CONSUMER
WOOD, COAL
AND
COMBINATION
RANGES
WOOD, COAL AND
GAS HEATERS
F. S. Lang
. Co.
CI. ROHAN, Local Mgr.
191 FOURTH ST.
pobtlAxd, oeegok
CAPITOL PROViD
NOMNGBUDG
LANG
Mfg
APOLLO CLUB CONCERT
. PROGRAM ANNOUNCED,
4-'-
1,
W. II. Boyer," conductor
The Apollo club's opening concert this
season will be given next Tuesday
night, November 30. at The Auditorium.
Charles Bulotti, California tenor, will
be the soloist V. H. Boyer will con
duct and the program will be as fol
lows :
"Vikinf Song"
(a) "The tiweetast Flower"...
(b) "Slumber bong" ..
' Apollo club.
"O Paradii Sorti ' ds L'Onde
"LAfricaJn." .
Mr. Bulotti.
"Midsummer Clouds"
"A Sons of Thank sgi ring". . . .
. Apollo club.
"O Mio Babbino Caro".
'Tea leox" .
"Songs My Mother Taught MeV
"Ah. Moon of My Delight".
Mr. Bulotti.
"Idy of, the Tycoon".
"The Lucky Horseshoe".
Apollo club.
"The Marie of Tour Erea". . .
....... Taylor
.Nenn
Schumann
from opera.
Meyerbeer
. . . .MacDowell
AUitaen
Puecinni
Rabey
Drorak
Lehman
.Bantock
Hadlsy
.Pena
"Belter M if All Those Endearing Young
Charms" Old Irish
"Sweet Peggy O'Neil". . Waldrop
"Loch Lomond" Old Scotch
Mr. Bulotu.
"Where My Cararan Has Rested" Lohr
"My Aative Land" .Kaon
. Apollo club.
Dixon Leaves for
Chicago to Attend
Lumber Meetings
Eugene. Nov. 27. Manager A. C
Dixon of the Booth-Kelly Lumber com
pany is en route to Chicago to attend
a conference of the' National Lumber
men's association; representing the West
ern lumbermen in the . effort to secure
equitable freight - rates. '
Sheriff Fred G. Stickels reported the
arrival of a new deputy in his house
hold, by way of the Eugene hospital.
Thomas Kay Mills
At Salem to Close;
250 to Lose Jobs
Salem Nov. 27. Two hundred and
fifty employes will be thrown out of
work here with closing down of the
Thomas Kay woolen mills, early In De
cember, announcement of which was
made Saturday". The demoralized con
dition of the woolen market is ex
plained by Kay as making this action
necessary.
Although It is not stated how long
the -mill will be closed, it will probably
not resume operations until conditions
become stabilized in the woolen market
Mills throughout the East and South
are closing, Kay said.
Sailor's Death Ends t
Family Reunion Plan
i ;
Salem, Nov. 27. Plans for a reunion
of the family of Mr. and Mrs. M. J.
Hunt of this city, upon the return of
their two jsons from the navy in Janu
ary, were" shattered by news of the
death of one of the sons, Earle M. Hunt,
at the Victoria Nursing hospital, Shang
hai, China, on November 22. Hunt was
a pharmacist's second mate in the navy,
enlisting four years ago at the age
of 20 years. His enlistment would have
expired in January. The cause of death
is given as cerebral menengitis. A
brother, John Halley Hunt, is stationed
at the Charleston, S. C., navy yard and
will be discharged from the service in
January.
Fruit Grower Held
As Eeckless Driver
Roseburg, Nov. 27. R. H. C. Wood,
a prominent fruit grower of the Garden
Valley district, was arrested here
charged with reckless driving, on com
plaint of Clair High, a youth, who was
slightly injured when Wood's car col
lided with his motorcycle. ' High was cut
about the head by broken glass from the
windshield and suffered a sprained
ankle.
O.A.C,May Exchange
Teacher With Chile
Oregon Agricultural College, Corvallis,
Nov. 27. The college may send a staff,
member,- whose interests include animal
husbandry, dairy bacteriology, and fruit
products, to Chile in exchange for one
of the foremost men in the humanities
at the University of Chile for one year,
beginning January li. President W. J,
Kerr has received a letter from a mem
ber of the committee on Hispanic-American
relations asking for this exchange.
Plan Special Train
Eugene, Nov. 27. EL L. Knapp, vice
president of the Alsea River Lumber
company, in an address before the Cham
ber of Commerce, said he was negotiat
ing with a large group of stockholders
at Jamestown, N. Y, with a view to
arranging for an excursion by special
train to this section. He hopes later on
to bring out from 100 to 200 men with
their families, to show them the big
modern lumber plant at Glenbrook, in
this county, and, if possible, to persuade
a large number of them to, locate per
manently. He said a number of men of
large- means are in the group and that
they have been favorably impressed with
the reports, of conditions in Western
Oregon. .
hJ naa,mu a,on 1 been instituted
L!f;ntralv.SreKOn Irrigation district
against the public service commission to
compel the commission to call a hearing
?w?rC?!Jslder a.n PPHcon of the dis
fees. Si n Ulcrea in maintenance
I
II
mm it- a
REAL ESTATE BILL
E
All Dealers Must Be Licensed
Under Federal Law; Deputy
Commissioner Is Provided For.
A bill for the regulation and li
censing of real estate dealers
throughout ' the state, broader- in
scope and more drastic than the ex
isting law which has been in oper
ation for two years, has been
drafted by the legislative committee
of the Portland Realty board and is
ready for Introduction at the coming
session of the legislature.
The present law vests the Insurance
commissioner with the authority for
and the duty of administering its pro
visions. The proposed bill continues
this feature, stating that the insurance
commissioner "shall be ex-officio real
estate commissioner with no additional
compensation," and it imposes upon him
the duty "to enforce all laws, rules and
regulations relating to the licensing of
real estate brokers."
IfEW POSITIOX CREATED
The bill provides, also, for the ap
pointment by the Insurance commis
sioner of a deputy real estate commis
sioner "at a salary not to exceed $4000
per annum." This deputy is to have
direct charge of the administration of
the real . estate commission . act, thus
creating a subordinate bureau within
the insurance department, as has been
done in the case of the fire marshal
act. The insurance commissioner re
ceives an annual salary of $3000. while
the proposed measure would make it
possible for his assistant to receive 11000
a year more. . :
The proposed bill provides in brief
that any person who, "for a compensa
tion or promise thereof, sells or offers
for sale, buys or offers to buy, nego
tiates or offers to negotiate, either di
rectly or indirectly, whether as the em
ployer of another or otherwise, the pur
chase, sale, exchange, lease or rental of
real estate or any interests therein
for others as a whole or partial vocation
shall be a' real estate broker wHhin
the meaning of the law.
LICENSE IS NECESSARY
All brokers are required to make ap
plication for a license before transact
ing business, to put up a bond of $1000
and to pay an annual license fee of $5.
One act within the scope of the defini
tion is sufficient to bring the actor
under the law, and, if he has not com
plied with its provisions, to make him
liable to its penalties.
All fees, fines and penalties exacted in
the administration of the proposed law
are to be paid to the state treasurer at
the close of each calendar month and
are to be used, in whole or in part, as
may be necessary, for the administra
tion of the department.
Any person desiring to engage in the
real estate business is required to make
application for a license. The continu
ation of this license is to be conditioned
upon the fact that the broker will con
duct his business at all times "without
DRAFTED
MEASUR
DRAST FJ NTERMS
Men's House Coats and Lounging Robes
Also at Smashed , Prices
Every lounging robe, house coat and bath robe in the-house
drastically reduced.
Higher priced garments
NOTED BOY SCOUT JOINS
PATROL IN ROSE CITY
F ' ,
f---f ik--:-.:.-:.-. - i. K
Fsy- mi '
il " ' JU
t ' - - .
it ' ' ' '
II -v- T V - K
Samuel Freed man
Portland has a new and distinguished
citizen in the person of Samuel Freed
man, aged 14 years, who recently came
from San Francisco to Portland to live.
Sam is a Boy Scout and is the pos
sessor of 25 honor badges, awarded for
proficiency in that many branches of
Scouting. He also wears a medal award
ed for Scout craftsmanship and another
for large sales of Liberty bonds during
the war.
He had the distinction of being chosen
one of the five San Francisco boys to
go to London for the big international
gathering of Boy Scouts Jteld last sum
mer. Sam attracted great attention.
both because of his many badges of
honor and because he was the second
smallest . Scout among all the thousands
present. -
Delightfully modest concerning all of
these honors and distinctions, he tells
of them and displays them only when
urged o, which demonstrates that he is
a true Scout in spirit as well as accom
plishment. Sam lives in South Portland
and has already identified himself with
troop 8T, of which Monroe Everett is the
Scout Master.
fraud or fraudulent representations."
The applicant is also required to fur
nish the recommendation of not less
than 10 freeholders of 'the county in
which he .desires to operate, certifying
that the applicant Is personally known
to them and that he is "honest, truth
ful and. of good moral character."
Provision is made for the revocation
of licenses for acts in violation of the
law, while it is provided that should
any one be convicted of acting' as a
real estate broker without having first
complied with the terms of the law he
shall be punished by a fine not to ex
ceed $500 or by imprisonment in the
county jail for not to exceed 90 days, or
both. Should the offender be a cor
poration the penalty of the law would be
a fine not to exceed $1000.
The proposed bill has been carefully
considered by the legislative committee
of the Realty board and will be ready
for introduction when the legislature
convenes.
PRICES have gone to SMASH. There is no need to disguise that fact. I am 'not posing as a
philanthropist claiming to reduce the high cost of living. Wholesale costs have tumbled, and
I am simply taking my loss cheerfully and passing the benefit on to you.
These
to. . .$ 6.40
to. . .$ 9.40
to. . $11.95
to. . .$15.00
to . . $22.50
proportionately reduced.
EUGENE POTTER (S;
SINGLE; THOUGHT
HIMSELF MARR ED
Wife Gets Divorce Without His
Knowledge, Weds in Seattle,
He Tells District Attorney.
Eugene R. Potter, who believed he
was a married man and suddenly
found out that his supposed wife got
a divorce, is to! appear before the
Multnomah county grand jury dur
ing the ensuing week, it is under
stood, to tell of his matrimonial trou
bles. He visited the district attor
ney's office Saturday and told his ex
periences. According to his statement he and
Gertrude Potter lived amicably as hus
band and wife in Portland for some
years, she being employed at a confec
tionery store. Two weeks ago. he says.
she decided to go to Seattle to visit rela
tives, to which he readily consented, but
a day or so later he received a news
paper clipping from that city showing
she had been married to a man named
Brunn.
Potter's investigations revealed, he
says, that through Attorney J. R. Green
field, Mrs. Potter had obtained a divorce
from him in Clatsop county, charging de
sertion ; that she had shown an affi
davit from Mary Keller, an employe at
the confectionery, stating she knew the
husband had not lived with the wife for
a year. The service of the summons was
by publication in the Seaside Sentinel
Where Potter says he had no possible
chance of seeing it. The divorce, he says,
was granted by a judge in Astoria, No
vember 10, and he claims that perjury
was used in getting it. Greenfield said
Saturday night he had no knowledge that
there was any irregularity in the affl
davits in the divorce case.
PLEADIN GS IS BOON CASOX
DAMAGE CASE ATTACKED
Two motions to strike were filed Sat
urday in the suit of Boon Cason, ad
ministrator of the estate of Wayne Ca
son, his son, against Mayor Baker, Chief
of Police Jenkins and Patrolmen James
S. Smith, John W. O'Halloran, Robert
E. Drake and Raymond Linton for dam
ages for the death of Wayne Cason.
Young Cason died from the effects of
a shot received after he had been ar
rested and had been taken to the police
station.
The motions were filed by Patrolman
John W. O'Halloran and the American
Surety company, each appearing indi
vidually. They move to strike for the
reason that the complaint contains more
than one cause of action and the same
are not separately pleaded.
AGENTS WANTED
Washinston and Oregon territory arailabl to lira
dtalrn for Demountable Glass-Enclosed Tops
which convert Buick. Essex. Dodge, ' Overland.
WUlys-Knieht, Reo. Maxwell. Chevrolet and Ford
cars into comfortable sedans snd coupes. Quality
torn at Quantity Prices. Writ now for exclu
ire proportion. J. C. WHITE, PACIFIC
COAST niSTniBTJTOR, 851 .POST ST., SAN
FRANCISCO. CAU
Every Cut-Sflk Tie
in the House
i -
Selling Up to Today at
$1.50 to $2
REDUCED TO
95c
are all fresh, new ties; no "seconds"; no "sub-standards."
300 Men's Silk
Shirts
Received This Week From the Factory
Former Prices $10 and $12 "
Reduced to
Three for $20
LIN
Demand for Labor Declines
Boston. Nov. 27. (I. N. a) Big de
clines in the demand for skilled and un
GOT k TODAY 70Z Pairs
Ladies High Shoes and OXFORDS
In military and Cuban .heels, tan mahogany calf and black
vici kid, all Goodyear welts. This is no job-Right from fac
tory. These were- bought to sell for $10 and $12. No use to go
into detail the Shoes will speak for themselves.
149-151 Fourth
Street
Every Cut-Silk Tie
in the House
Selling Up to Today at
$2.50, $3 and $4
REDUCED TO
$1 .55
JlL.
skilled . labor are shown In th figures
for October, made public In the report
of G. Harry Dunderdale,' superintendent
of the public employment office. Records
2oude of uatttp
See
rf
Every Knit Silk Tie
in the House
Selling Up to
$4 and $5
REDUCED TOD
r $2 ?5
They are the product of the
1500 Men's Fiber Silk
Woven Madras and Silk
Stripe Madras Shirts
y . Regularly Priced $S to $7 -
Reduced to $3.45
Three for $10
Do Your Chrismas
Shopping Now
Leading Clothier
show a decrease of 22 per cent in orders
from employers as compared with Scp
tembeV, and 42 per cent when compared
with the orders of October. M919.
them
YOU Mow
values.
Next to Honeyman
Hardware
at
best manufacturers.