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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1922)
ONISTTRUCTION work wrll beekn immediatelv on a eroub ; "streets. No. 1 House iThe site selected is at the intersection of Iron Mountain boulevard below is shown the power and merits, each heated bv el ectricitv. apartments. Cost is estimated at REALTORS RAN SALE OF CITY'S TAX LIEN Company Prdposfed by Portland " Realty Board to Market 3000 Parcels of Residence Property Tentative pdins for the organization f a corporation amonfc members of the Portland Realty Boar;d for the "Jpurpose of marketing approximately 93.000,000 worth of residence lots held. fry the city on tax and assessment Itens were prepared last week br a committee of nine prominent realtors. Proposed methods for the sale ot the property will be presented this week to" the city commissioners, according to announcement Saturday by the presi dent of the board. . Acquisitions of tax Ue&cfiroperty by the city have been accumulating for several years and an aggregate of thousands of lots scattered '"in all sections of the city is held from the tax rolls. A committee headed by Commissioner C. & Pier Is in charge e this property, and at a recent meet fag! of the realty board the council ap pealed for the assistance of the real tors !r disposing of the property toJ private purchasers. COMPACT TO BE RGAXIZED The plan outlined calls Tor a cor poration capitalised at 25,000, with 250 hares at $100 each? Organizers of the corporation . named In the report 'of the realty board committee are: Paul C Murphy, Henry Fries, Fred W. German, Coe A. McKenna, Frank McGuh-e, Joseph M. Ilealy. Dorr E. Keasey. Dean Vincent. A. R. Kitter and Henry Beckwlth. aH members of the - committee. Purchase of . -stock would be open to all members of the poard. ; 1 "It is proposed that the corporation enter Into a ccmtract witl the , city for the sale of all- property hld for delinquent taxes3 and assessments, Each lot or parcel would be appraised by experts appointed by the realty J board and offered at a price agreeable to the company' and the city commis sioners. iREFEREJfTIAIi BIGHTS GITEW Purchase of the property wouW be .' pen to all legitimate ...buyers.' with provision that the immediate previous . wners be given preference it they Choose to retrieve title . prior to the public sale. All regularly licensed real estate brokers would be .given an pportunlty lo participate In the sale . tat a fair rate of compensation; According to A. R. Ritter.- who In troduced the motion, calling for the ap pointment of the realty board commit tee, the method of sale to be presented to the city commissioners would pro- , Tldo !ror. return cjf the property to pri vate owners as- quickly as possible. . ears being exercised to protect the In terests of tho city and the public. 520,000 Business Building; Planned ' V plana for a one-story .brick and on . rreto building to" occupy ,ui Irregwlar shaped" tract with 100 feet frontage on . i Sandy, boulevard at Bast 24th street has been planned by Charles ' VT. Erts . fc Charles H. Fox, and. construction .i- la under way. .The-building will bouse iveretail shops; and -two apartments. The comer store space has been leased to a drug firm." '. "-. - l' : - STATE TO SPEND $175,000 ON designed by O M. Akers for Mrs. heating plant All buildings of W. ri. Kobmson is owner or $20,000. No. 6 Men s 'dormitory an No. 7, adrninistration Colorado Company Leases Space Jot Coast Headquarters Approximately 2500 square feet of storage space on the third floor Of the warehouse building recently built at the northwest- corner rof Park and Flanders streets- has been leased by the, Gates company of 'Denver, tire manufacturers, as Its Pacific North west headquarters. The property Is owned by EL D. Van Dersal and the lease was arranged by Chester Moores, local realtor. After a survey of the Pacific North west field, H. O. Keibig of San Fran cisco, Pacific Coast manager of the Gates company, 'decided that the com pany's wholesale business in Oregon, Tashington and Idaho could be han dled to best advantage from Portland, and last week's, transaction resulted. Charles Combs has been called from the factory at Denver to take charge of the Portland branch and has moved here with his family. ' Women Realtors Plan Series of Lectures lI At the regular semi-monthly lunch eon of the Women'sRealty Board Fri day noon at the Oryron grill the prin cipal address was delivered by C. V. Johnson, deputy state real estate com missioner. Recent cases illustrating the problems that the commissioner's office is called upon to solve were cited by Mr. Johnson, who answers queries propounded by the women realtors. - T. B. Xeuhausen, president of the board, announced that an address by a promi nent speaker on real estate subjects will feature the board's luncheon guth- erlngs during the Iwmfer. At the next meeting, to be hed Friday; November 10, W. B. Shivery, chairman of the legal committee of the Portland Realty foara ana author of "The Realtor's Legal Handbook," Will speak. , a. Community House to Rise m South Bend South 'Beiid. Vash.. 1 Oct. 28. -The Leber brothers, well-known members of a large pioneer South Bend family and .prominent : In various ' business enterprises here, have announced their intention of constructing a combina tion pleasure building in the city. ' It will feature a skating rink, a gym nasium, a swimming tank, a dance hall and a banquet room and will be buil especially . ror tne youtn ana : business men of the town who will use it some what as a Y. M. C A. The building Will be 100 feet square, two stories high, of modern frame construction and will be built in the heart of the city. It wilt be regarded more as a 'community institution than as a striet- ly commercial enterprise, since these Is a dearth of good amusement tn the idty at present. - $37,498,030 Filed As Assessed s Salem, Or, Oct. 28. -The total as sessed value Of property on the tax rolls tn Marion county this year is t37.4M.03O. or 3 8.560 in excess of last year, according to figures made public py uscar steelnammerv county as sessor. Farm lands, assessed at 19, 493,125, form the- bulk of the total as sessed valuation of -the1 county. : with improvements on ; farms adding an other ?2.48,Ei5 to theSTt rolls. r . ' . I. . , - . : - . v J . , . of five buildincs as the nucleus Harold D. Gill, to be erected and Edgecliff Road No. 3 the group werje designed by Houghtahng & Uougan. No. 4 Kobmson apartments; recently completed at tast Zd and jyiadison the property. lo. D me-story concrete Duuaing at cast znin SIX FIREPROOF APARTMENTS ARE TOTAL IN CITY Fire Hazard In Hundreds of Frame Hotels and Apartment Housis Danger to Life. The sense of security afforded by the fireproof hotel or apartment house is an integral asset to the . tenant. He meed not await the test of con flagration to prove ; the efficacy of steel and concrete" as a protection for his life and nrooertv. but is renaid tor his caution each day and night in freedom from tne fear which haunts the dweller in a. building of flimsy con- In epite of fire losses amounting to hundreds of thousands of dollars annu ally in apartment houses, and notwith standing tne advantage of lower insur ance rates in fireproof buildings, records- in the building inspector's office show only six fireproof apart ment houses out of a total of 222 in the city. Of th balance 16 are semi fireproof, 146 are of brick exterior with wood framework and 154 are of. com mon frame construction. HIGH CtASS COJfSTKireTIOy The Ambassador apartment house. recently completed at Sixth and Madison-streets, represents the highest type of fireproof construction In the city and equal points of structural excel-1 lenceare found in the new Sovereign apartment hotel nearing completion at Broadway and Madison streets. These two buildings are examples, both in construction" and' equipment, of the higher standard now demanded by dis criminating patrons of multiple, dwell ings. The public in tne larger cities of the country Is becoming educated to the advantages of the fireproof building construction and this advance in Intelligence means the rapid elimin ation of the frame apartment house. , The danger of loss of life and prop erty which stands as a constant men ace to the tenant dt a poorly ' con structed apartment? house was! well illustrated in the Eaton Court fire. at 11th and Yamhill streets, which re tailed In the death of four people on the morning 4of August 7, 1920. The rapid spread of the flames was ajded in this instance by an - open elevator shaft surrounded; by a circular wooden staircase. Interior of the building was of wood construction and even the par titions pa the two top,, floors were of wood. . ' FIRES CAI7SE HE ATT I.OSS The . ease with which fire spreads through the apartment bouse of ordin ary' construction was well illustrated In three recent fires, subsequent to the Elton Court disaster the May apart ment fir In June, 1921. the Zumbro Court fire on September 18, 1922. and the 'Orandesta aportment-fireln tne early .no-urs or October 9th. 'in , eacn instance.1 according to Fire Marshal Gren fell, the fire started In the base ment 'and worked - its way .: rapidly to the upper 'floors of the building. Absence of fire stops along lines of plumbing extending between floors af fords an easy avenue for smoke and flames and where suites are identical on tife floors of the apartment bouse, with bathrooms laid tn tiers, the aper ture about - the : plumbing creates draft whlcn to a short interval will PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDA ERECTION OF, for an institution for .the empldymehTof Ae blind The site chosen on a site facing Talbott Road Two of a group of five buildmgs btiilding of the state institution for carry a fire from the basement to the top story or roof of the building. Hood over kitchen ranges frequently are con nected with a thin metal' vent extending through the attic to-the roof of the apartment house. . Fire in a kitchen on a lower story naturally follows the vent, and with the melting of the thin metal the flames find contact with wooden floors and joists, quickly spreading to all parts of the building. BETTER BUILDINGS DEMANDED . In fireproof buildings apertures about the water and plumbing pipes are filled with concrete and the re quirements for this class of construc tion afford protection from the spread of flames from one floor to. another or between adjoining suites on the same floor. While rules of the housing code are generally enforced " by the build ing inspection department, there is no ordinance requiring fireproof construc tion in multiple dwellings and tne rec ords show that more than 60K families in the city are housed in apartments of wooden construction, while approxi mately 15,000 rooms are contained in more than 300 frame'! and mill con structed, hotels and rooming houses. The keen demand for suites in the Ambassador and other fireproof apart ment houses' and the number of appli cations already received for quarters in the Sovereign hotel indicate an awakening of the public' to the danger of the fire hazard and an appreciation of, the advantages afforded by modern high class construction. - Tire Corporation Leases Space for Retail Salesroom Negotiations were closed last week by officials of the Columbia Tire cor poration with Fred IL RothcbUd for a five-year lease on, 2000 square feet -of ground-floor space in the Lowengart building at the corner of Broadway and Bumside street. The tire corpo ration proposes o open A retail shop at this location for the distribution of automobile tires and tubes to be manufactured at ' its plant nearing completion at' Mississippi avenue and Columbia boulevard. i - The space leased has a frontage of IS feet on Broadway and 65 feet on Burn side street, with 64 feet ot show win dow spacft. A driveway from Burnslde street will lead to a service station at the rear of the showroom. Manufacture of tires and tubes In 1C sixes will begin at the Columbia Tire corporaOQn plant about Decem ber 1. according to Alfred A. Aye. gen eral sales manager of the company, The plant has a daily capacity output of S00 tires and 500 tubes. Branch agencies for distribution of the com pany's products have, been established at several towns In Oregon and Wash ington. I Apartment' House Will Rise Kelso : , ; y, .. . . --V-SV Kelso', WasbV Oct. 28 Grover I. Thornton and Senator Frank Q. Barnes of Co wilts county have bad plana prepared . for ; a modern apartment house at the- corner of ; Second and Cowllts streetav The structure will be 60 by Jt)0 feet,- three stories . in height, above the grade floor. It will be of brick construction and will con tain 27 apartments. Plans have been completed by C H. Brlstow, Portland architect.: and. call for .,a ' building of colonial type, The contract will be awarded In a few days. Construction cost is estimated, at $59,000. . . Y! MORNING , OCTOBER INSTITUTION; FOR overlooking thecityand, surfoundmg xalley being erected: tor the new state ana 3anay ixmicvara, pianncu the blind, j . :t . W;-"" ' Popularity of High-Class Sub urban Residence Tracts Is Shown in ladd Estate Sales. X : ' j . The movement of Dunthorpe home- sites during the Inst five months fairly relects the eteadily increasing demand for high class suburban residence prop erty. This highly improved view acre age was placed on the market by the Iadd Estate company May 15 and a report on the addition issued last week by Frank B. Upshaw, manager of the property, showed 13 sales aggregating $54,000, with a large list of prospective buyers lined up j for the autumn and winte season. - 4 Duiithorpe is reached by a;20-mlnute drive south along the paved River roaJ. The sites are wooded with maple, nr4 ana aogwooa -ana. range Lrom, one quarter acre toj two acres in area. Eight miles of asphalt bound macadam driveways lead jfo- all sections of the tract at easy grade. ,Bull Run water, gas, electricity and otligr public util ities are available to every site. The addition is close to Riverside school. Quick transportation to the west side business district Is afforded by tne Southern Pacific red" electric carline and by motor bits between 8 a. m. and 11 tsn TV TT. Seven new bouses, Aggregating in ex-l Ceseu. OI )8a,uvu in consu-ucuun cusi a n AAA . . . . ' 1 being built on Dunthorpe sites, wade Pipes designed tne home being erected for Morris E. Crumpacker on Iron Mountam boulevard, near . Edgecliff road.' Jamieson,; Parker prepared plans Tor the house being, built for William II. Anderson on Edgecliff road near Greenwood road; Maurice, Whitehouse la architect for Percy A. Smith, whose new borne is under way at the corner of Greenwood road and Iron Mountain boulevard, and i Jacobberger & Smith were employed iy J. C. Beatty to de sign the house under instruction at Greenwood road and Pacific highway. Other nomebuSlders with houses un der construction are: II. G. TJoi never. Edgecliff road near Greenwood road ; Mortimer H. Hartwell, Mears avenue near Greenwood;- road;: and Arthur Sherwood. ' Iron Mountain boulevard near Greenwood ' road. s Besides the houses sew being built at Dunthorpe, sites have been purchased by the fol lowing business and professional men who propose to bulla tn tne spring ; ur. H. T4 Parsons. t' Henry .W. .Wesslnger, PhillO Hart, J.: V. G. Posey. . Stanley Smith. H. W. Bates and John C. Van Etten. Three of the houses nnaer con struction are being- built by the Pbippa- Van Etten company. f:rr j--, .'.,. ,,'. Centralis,' Wash- Oct 2S.--Q TJ. Salts. president -of the. Washington Cancer Institute announced today that the new two-story brick building being erected one mtUs south of the city -will be. ready for oocupancy. about November-!-:' Th structure, is being ; erected at a cost of )i approximately $50,000. Eaulomentwlll be ' Installed W a few daya and - will accommodate 'about . 50 patient - . t , ,, , r.. ' j BRISK DEMAND 20, 1922. EIIPEOYIENT OF THEBLIND for die institution isSa tract of I institution tor the employment ot vuancs w , ioi v. 4 . ' , . -rS' ' J STATE BM OF T VALUABLE REALTY Oregon State B anklpg Depart ment Offers Several Parcels of City and , Farm Property. Among the assets of the State Bank of Portland, which, suspended opera tions 'February 16, are a . number of arcels of industrial and residence property in the city and ; a large amount of farm land in Western' Ore gon and Western Washington. In the process of liquidating the assets of -the bank the 8ta,te banking department already has disposed of a -considerable amount of its realty holdings and of fers the remaining parcels at prevail ing market prices. , One of the most attractive offerings made by the state banking department is block 10, Sherlock addition. . The property is bounded by York. iVersteeg, Roosevelt and y 21st streets and Is de sirable as a site for warehouses or manufacturing plants. Ralh-oad track age runs to the property from west side terminals. The block is leased to the Emerson Hardwood company. Another tract with potientlal value as a manufacturing Bite consists of" 17 acres located in South Portland, with 1265-foot frontage on tRe west" side of the Willamette river land extending westward to tne Southern Pacific tracks. The Harbor Realty company owns i a third interest in - the property and the remaining' twothlrds Interest Is held in trust for a charitable instl tution by A., L. .Grutze. trust, officer of the Title Trust company. 1 r One half of block 16, North Portland, offers advantages for wholesale or warehouse operations. Th block is adjacent to the properties of; the Mont gomery Ward company nd the Ameri can Can company. It j la unimproved but Is served with railroad trackage. Among the. residence properties Is a tract of. 4.T. acres on East Stark street, adjoining tAurelhurst on the east. . Farm - lands - are ' offered - in Clackamas, Xouglas, Uncoln and other counties In, ' Oregon and f: Klickitat, Clarke and Pacific counties in Wash ington., . .t ' t.. i Seai(ieHotel loseMbyemberl 1 --- Seasidey Oct,- 2s. -RaJther! than face months of heavyl expense, .wlth pros pects of smaB patronage, : the Hotel Seaside wili be closed by the manage ment November i for I the f winter, ilt will be reopened .April! 1. During the winter a new hardwood! floor for danc ing will , be laid 'in th dining : room. and other Improvements will be made. . . i '.j . ' ii , ' a) .'.I. , ! 1 "- " 1 1 1 LAND HOLDS FOR ! acres fronting on East Glisan designed by Wade Pipes fbt Maurice Crumpacker. the bimd.- 1 he building above, streets at , uc wuvivuc vu wuuum jv .viou.u tv.k3 Electric Heaters Installed in New, Apartment House The Robinson apartment house, re cently completed at East 23d and Madison streets.- is the. first -apartment house in the city to be heated by elec tricity and the experiment is j being watched with : Interest, by -owners of multiple dwellings and hotel property. The heaters, were , Installed' in each apartment suite by t the Portland Rail way, Light .A Power company. An auxiliary furnace In the basement heats the hallways and supplies the house with hot water.- , t- . , - ' A The apartment house Is a two story structure with exterior walls of stone tone stucco. - It Is 46 -.by 76 . feet Hln dimensions and contains 10 two-rom and two three-room apartments. The building was erected by W. H. Rob in - son on a site purchased from Kitter. Lowe & Co. 'Construction was ap proximately f 25,000. -- Assessment Data For Columbia Ready Warren. 'Oct. -28. The Columbia county assessor's office has just com I pleted compiling data for the 1922 as sessment and gives the total valuation for 1922 as S16.461.220y or 1416,000 mors than for 1921. , This increase is due to Improvements, as there has been no raise In land values. There are 16,660 acres of land Wider cultivation and 125, 944 .acres susceptible 1 of cultivation. There are 1823 horses, 8903 cattle, 1248 sheep and . goats, -971 hogs .and. 225 dogs assessed. Soldiers' exemption shows ,125,400. This does not cover public utilities, which is expected to be about 13.000,000 more by the stats tax commission. ' f Aberdeen to. Vote Oh School Bonds .' -Aberdeen, "Wash., Oct.! 28. Bonds In the sum of 8100,000 are to be asked for by the board of education? in va special election to be caiieo oeioretne close of th year. ; The money from the bonds. If the plan carries, win be used ' In building a Junior high school and in the 'erection . of ' grade school buildings. At the - present . time - the high school Is overcrowded and the junior high, school, is an absolute ne cessity In addition to the "Aberdeen pupils , Coemopolis -has added Its 4ZUOta of high, school students by the decision of the- Coemo polls board of education mads early this year-to abandon Its high school on account of the exces sive cost. The increase in the .num ber of pupils in all or the schools of Aberdeen this year is between 200 and 400. The - Increased ; population In Aberdeen has demanded a new school building almost every year In .the past five years. . Three new buildings' have been added the past two years, besides a number' of movable buidlnga. street between 84th and 86th is the industrial scnool anct , ' ! LE, BETH ISRAEL TO HOUSE STUDENTS Work to Start on Thfete I Story Sunday School Building Ad joining J2th Street Edifice. A three-story Sunday school annex to Temple Beth Israel Ur called for in plans recently; completed by Sutton A ; Whitney, and construction work on the building will start at tan early date. The building will be et, concrete 'with; brick and terra cotta exterior and; will '. harmonize architecturally witb the -, temple. J v. . The site of the Suifday school annex is the 60x100 .foot lat at the -southeast I corner of 13th and Main streets, ad- v Joining the - temple property on ithe west.! The ground floor of . the building will contain a large auditorium equipped with a stage. A kitchen and rooms for ladles' organizations also will b- the ground floor. - The two upper stories -wfll be used for class rooms and will be equipped with furniture and special facilities for Sun- day school work. Temple Beth Israeli - congregation Is one- of the oldest and most prosperous religious organisations In ithe -city, and,;- according - to Rabbi Wise, the erection of the Sunday school building is essential to; meet - the de mands of an increasing membership. ; ilidgefield School ; . Bids Are Rejected 1AuVl. - Ridgefleld. Wash4 Oct' 21. -AU Mids for the purchase of the-schoo mouse, a ; frame building, in district Na 14, five ' miles north of here, up for auction ; last Saturday, were rejected, t on lc - count of being too low. The property r consists of two buildings and the di rectors have decided to Aise one of them as a play shed for the hew school. An attempt will be4 made to ; dispose of 4 the original schoolbouse by auc tion. The new, structure, a frame one room' building, has 1 Just . been' com pleted at a cast of about -13600. A basement community hall is part of the building, which will be dedicated by ' its community with appropirate exer- ' cises some time - next - week. , Mrs. , Esther Hatch Is teacher and George J. Ungemaeb, Edward X. Taylor and F. M. Hatch comprise board" of rectors, s . . ; BTJTS OARAGE . - Ions, Oct.- 28 H. J. Biddle of Uspp ner has purchased the building In lone formerly. occupied by the .Independent garage and will conduct tn automo bile; repair, shop. - The building, will also be used as an automobile salesroom-. - ' 1 N