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About Port Orford news. (Port Orford, Oregon) 1926-193? | View Entire Issue (April 29, 1930)
Port Orford Water Deep Harbor The KEY to the Development of the Vast Natural Wealth of the Mid-Pacific Coast Empire PORT ORFORD NEWS VOL. IV. Port Orford, Oregon, Tuesday, April 29, 1930 The Rise of the Pacific; Prosperity tor Western Ports 0rrunn i s Hly Home By Charles A. Howard Oregon Is My Home. I believe in the brightness of her sunshine, the warmth of her showers and the greenness of her trees, for they bring comfort to those who dwell among her hills. I believe in the beauty of her streams, the majesty of her mountains and the glory of her sunsets, for they cause the soul of man to expand. I believe in her history, for it is the stirring epic of an heroic people. Number 25. Additional Contracts on Coast; Commission Lets New Work By FRANK LIN F. KORELL, is the future more replete with Rep. In Congress from Oregon The quotation to the effect that hope for the unlimited expansion Well Shows Oil Silins P o,tlan d ’ April 24. The state farm ing, industry and manufac the course of empire is ever w est of highw ay comm ission today let con- turing. Coquille, April 26 —The well o f , tracts approxim ating three quarter« ward has become embodied in our Last but not least, it may be said the F at Elk Oil A Gas company a million dollars for highw ay everyday American speech as firm ly as many of the best known say w hile on this phase o f the subject, near here is now down 800 feet. *’°rk The Oregon Coast highway Two stratas of oil sand have been name in for a goodly portion of the ings of Shakespeare. It is true, too, that Oregon, W ashington, and Alas encountered during the past week, entracts. as follows: because ever since Father Abraham ka are the world’s largest fisheries, ! but the drilling w as continued on Berry Creek-Sutton Lake section moved out from Ur of the Chaldees, producing wealth of about $85,000,’ through each and is now in hard of three miles of grading was let the tide of m igration and progress 000 a year. rock again Forty to fifty feet per ,o Earl McNutt of Eugene, at a has been westward. There c a m e ' Although the development of Pa- ! day in depth is being made when Price ot $102,000 JKe empire of Persia, then Greece, cif,c coast commerce has been Idrilling. Many believe that after The Gold Beach-Meyers Creek then Rome, and the countries o f steady, it was greatly enhanced by passing through the hard rock »eeilon of eleven miles of resurfac- W estern Europe, but the tide did j the opening of the Panama Canal strata oil or gas in quantity will inK was let to Saxton and Looney not stop here. Christopher Colum- in 1914 and by two events o f great ' ¡F be found Each Sunday the com- a» a price of $22,000. , bus and his hardy adventurers im portance occurring in the year £ pany will entertain those who vis-1 Tom I.illiebo of Reedsport was sailed westward across the great 1898. These were the battle of S’ It the well at luncheon. low bidder on the slips and ap- ocean and discovered the N ew Manila Ray which brought about -------------------- proaches for the ferry crossing at World Soon the pioneers were set- ultim ately the annexation o f the tling the W estern Hem isphere and j Philippine Islands to the United t Medford Boy Winner Coos Bay his Prlce b*ing $63,000 j Contracts were awarded for 182 discovering the untold riches em- States, and the formal incorpora- Portland, April 26. _ William miles of oiling of which »6 miles braced w ithin its bosom. j tion of the Hawaiian Islands as an Dougherty, Jr., of Medford, son of will be nonskid. Jess Darling of In a few generations commerce American territory. The opening a pear orchardist of the Rogue Eugene offered the comm ission a on the Atlantic surpassed that on i o f canal, o f course, greatly facilitat- I valley, Thursday night won the high 50 acre tract at Siltcoos lake for the M editerranean which had been ' ed commerce between the Atlantic school oratory championship of Ore- park purposes. the principal highw ay up to that , and the Pacific and the acquisition gon before 3,000 persons who _______ _ time. Again the tide of human pro- i of the islands in the Pacific made ; jammed the public auditorium and gress sw ept westward It continued the United States a world power Oregon Rail News heartily beat hands over the de- to roll across the American continent In 1913 Uncle Sam supplied about « 9 vision T his w as the state finals of Portland, April 2 5 - Formal in - until today we see the great Pa- thirty-two per cent of Pacific Latin- WkMP«iWi8U«j«u«8..«»-8x.«<».n«.».x.«Mu<xx.x.x.>nx>8.x.x.xai.i. x .Kix-kjh th*' natlonal oratorical contest on thortaatlon for the Oregon Electrlo cific com ing into its own. although American imports. Great B ritlan’s — ' “■ — — •"---------- - ------»he constitution held um ln the railroad to construct 68 miles of it has been only a little more than share was twenty-one per ceht and Vn Enviable Record Campaign Shows Apathv Dairv Snecialist Dio« au»p'c«< ° f the Oregonian, w ith the new nnes and branches in u n n a hundred years since its seaborne Germany’s, nineteen per cent In Dairy . ■ o u j Specialist r K iu n i Dies ¡cooperation of the Oregon Bar as- county was leceived by W F Tur- I925 the proportion of the United Portland. April 21. - Republican In tim e the P acific will undoubt- States w a s f l f t v ‘ “T « ~ "epuoucan With the May prim aries less than Corvallis, ■orvallla, April 22. 22 N. C. C Jamie- J a m l. 8ociation the U niversity of Pregón ncr. president, yesterday, the esti m ates was fifty per cent while Eng- N ational Committeeman Ralph E. three w eeks away, the political sit- son, extension dairy specialist of and _ , _ the ’"’h001'1 . . ........................ mated cost being $2 500,000 It is «tlly sut pass th« Atlantic in com- land's share haH foiinn u nm . . . - ■------ — _. . . . w*uy o u c v ia tiB i o i to Lewis expected the work will start Im- merce, just as the Atlantic a few cent and G era a n y ’s to ten P7 l t o r n e d t o h i h recen4ly re‘ nation shows many signs of apathy Oregon State college, died Sunday Serond Place went centuries ago went ahead of the Uncle Sam is n o w J . 7 " d * h ‘8 home hpre from a but between now and May 16 things and his funeral was held here today JohnBon’ W ashington high school, niediately and be pushed to com Mediterranean. s u p 'h e „ L " ‘ h-8* ? " ? " WaShington -should warm up considerable While with many men prominent In the Po_rUand pletion as rapidly as possible. supplier of products to every coun- four months presided In the prophetic words o f T h e n , trv in Sooth ------ where .. for D •" — ...... .. ” he ’■ ---------- the many cro8S currents continue affairs of the state in attendance 1 Third went to R oss Knotts, The The Interstate comm erce commis- dore RooLevelt ’ The Med t e T r ^ cent ion o f Para Jo Cha'rman ° f the "ational ba">p a clear cut analysis of the Mr. Jamieson was well k n ow n 1 Dal188 aion al"° ““ ‘horlzed the Southern eJn era dtod with The d t e c o v e r X In the daC. hetoc th . ‘8 " Cand!date for re- R aP P ~™ ‘hat the race throughout the state by reason o f , --------------------| Pacific to abandon parts of its sys- I believe in her men and women, for they have the courage of the pioneer and fear not to try new things. I believe in her children, for they are the sons and daughters of those who followed the rugged westward trail to the land of their dreams. I believe in her schools, for they are not dead with tradition but are close to the life of the people. I believe in the courage and fortitude of her pioneers, and in the ultimate fulfillment of the destiny that they visioned. Oregon Is My Home. Amerlca the Atlantic era has America, m e A tlantic era has leached the height of its develop- merit, the P acific era, destined to be the greatest is just at the dawn.’’ ' ThTjC« ? ,m |re<? OrL fOr thi»S D r°m ecy. In addition to the great P acific slope of the United States, the great ocean touches the coasts of Japan, China, Asiatic Russia, the Philip- pines. South America. Alaska. Ha- of the canal* t h r ° p e n in g °" *2 8ucceed hlm 8elf Mr or the canal, the far countries of W illiams has served 22 years as the P acific sent us about tw elve national com m itteem an from Ore- per cent of our total imports and Ron, and through his consistent and took about seven per cent o f our energetic efforts much has been ^ .P^rtS N ° W ,h6y Send Us “ bout accomplished toward the general thirty per cent o f our imports and , welfare of Oregon He is ranking take fifteen percent of our exports vice-chairman of the com m ittee, In the words of the W ashington and as the office carries no salary Post: "Japan is a better customer or expense account, he pays his of this country than France. Itaiy. own way His vast knowledege and for the republican nomination for governor lies between Senator Hall e - d Senat Corbett r v - n o r Nor , ad > - : to be d p i , b ’ t„. other c .it tes to be in the running _. Q „ .. F mor that S e r f - an *d,hdraw r°»" a 8 ° deccive adhcr- *“*" ” a " a n d 8 a u s8 ‘»*"1 ♦" »>v his great interest in the dairy in- dustrv _____________ TV, n t r C1I L a Dill 0, S ' g h t Fred Hansen, bookkeeper for Creighton Sauers In his logging op- erpt,onfl on S r, )th r| , f( f Burrs. Oiegon, about two w eeks ago to dispose o f som e property In , pn 7 a v s «Zo Mr wail, Australia. N ew Zealand, Af- rica, America and Canada, - ’ Central ........ .....................................| n a u It makes possible increased com- merce between the United States and all of these countries. Through the Panam a Canal, too. there has been opened up a better communl- cation between our western coast and Cuba, the W est Indies and Europe Argentine or Australia. Only three wide acquaintances throughout the other a g r e a te r v n l. country make him invaluable to u . i . nations laae a take greater vol- c o u n ir y m ase mm invaluable to ume of American exports. Nearly Oregon, and his services should be ten per cent of o u r --------------------- -- r e ta in e d h v h ia r e - e l e c t io n per cent of our imports come retained by his re-election from Japan. That country is s e c -; -------------------- ond only to Canada as a source of Eliminating C lirv p supply for American markets ” The ” VUI ’ V experto have found out that if we The work c f «Hmlnatlng the re- We e r s e c u r v e on th e h irrh w sv in could increase China's per capita vere<“ curve on the highway in imports from the United States to Port Orford *’ Proceeding rapidly r '-X tln ^ W* « ° n t f un<Jatlon in ."L” fact ” Senator _ 7 3 — Hal,. „ TPP,rfWC P<, ° n thP m a,tei 8 na.u, a ld ’ "J j u u n s t i 8 nay a y toT to r m e »hat tn a t the th e rumors published by the Portland press are unfounded as far as I am concerned " --------------- In the contests for republican n a tlo n .i -------- -- P " national comm itteeman, United States senator and congress from Hansen wired Sauers from B u m s “8™ leaving ‘rOn? HU™8 stating that he wa« for camp im mediately Since receipt o f r8Ce,.pt. °f .. .. . . th<> t,’,p8 ram no further word has Ppp" receiv'>d flom Hansen, and he has not arrived. The matter h a . . _ , . . h,* H f f i i! " i t* i " aherlff at Bend ,or Investigation ¿ 7 ' H an7en" «J “a'blto and of^excellem s ,/ m h n ^ s I » State Registration S isiraiion Salem. April 26. - Secretary of ' ** Hal E H°"8’ announ<'ed to- dB »"'* he total registration of 8tatP ” of which 284,- 241 arP rePubllcan®. 103,295 demo- frats, 220 progressives, 703 prohlbl- tionl' t"’ 1059 and 9 228 w lthout Party affiliations. -------------------- ' Oregon To The Front . „ * A M o n ta n a n , . n . . . h i . ... from San D ie g o s a id t th i it' »£om *an Oiego said to this writer the other day: "Everybody in Call- fornla is saying that the next big boom will take place in Oregon, and -— mg Plan" plans to ° ,° ° thP,T m aklng get In on the ground floor so 7.',iil“ a * rO.U"a T T . . But It w n’t be“ T a 'em In Washington Multnomah and Yamhill counties The Oregon Electric recently n u d e application to the com m ission for the construction of a 40-mile southwestward extension to tap the large timber stand In the head- w aters o t the Sluslaw country and It Is expected that this application will be acted upon favorable vet •>"" year Tn eom m entlng on the extensions ot 'b* Oregon Electric into new 'errltory, the Salem Journal says ’ - e d lto r ia llv Th r. gOn E , w t r t ^ re«" '^ ! road by £ ^elopm m t of Hs M b X ^ X * . I I . the au- for traffic as _____ revealed by »borlzed construction of the Leban- "" Ca8pad'a hra- h Into the Vaa- The various sectors of the Asiatic equal Japan's, this would mean an by Rhoades A Dillard, sub-contrac- this district, Ralph E. Williams. hls flipn(lii £ .e f f , that lu8t delayed development Wh PadP UmbPr bpl‘ and the P'°PO«ed side of the P acific basin have an increase of $6,000.000.000 o v e r torB for the regrading of the Den- Senator Charles L McNary and thin ha/ ha„Dened to hlPi to n go n it f n ? t T i t J ? ™ extension from Eugene south into area of seven and one-half million China’s present total of $600.000,000 " »rk -P ort Orford sector o f the R epresentative W illis C. Hawley, P’ y k , ,rri wHh ,w o the timbered region of the Sluslaw square m iles compared with two In 1929 our total sales to custom Rooaevelt route. The material from candidates for the offices in the „ . a i u bPth f th '" ° a " 1» *nd and UmM ua regions has now been and three-quarter million square ers amounted to $5.128,400.000 worth the e* cavation necessary in reduc- order named, appear to have a clear ’ r<>l8es SCCIHC Highway ’ . " nem K't ahead of you, you supplemented by an application for miles that m ake up the American of com m odities Compare this world ing thls curve Is hauled both north right-of-way although their cam- "Southwestern Oregon is truly the H q P ° r U n ra*rh UP wt,h them thP purchase of the 40-mlle Valley side T his am ounts to slightly more trade with our potential exports to and south to widen the roadway to palgns for renomlnatlon In each home of lovely wild flowers, for I * 1 ’ *a r * tunning one of ra| | road |nto thp S ||etx timber and than one-fifth of the land surface C hina if the day ever arrives and lhe 8tandard width of 32 feet case have not reached any great have never seen such beautiful rho- „ „ T ' u . . . ^ .7 .7 ° " ? - " '" P 11"*11 "be the construction of a 2%-mile dodendrons. azaleas and other wild P.n ,P? ,H UP JT,tb Wa"hington and branch from Orville to Indepen- of the globe. The land area of the it surely will when China shall have The crushing and hauling of grav- degree of activity C alifom ia Eugene R egister dence. Pacific basin is one-third larger a stable government and become a el to stock Plles continues unabated. The contest of greatest Interest flowprs ,n abundance, as in Coos I These projects will cut into the than the continent of North Amerl- prosperous nation and ow ing to the excellent quality to southwestern Oregon is probably and C u ,,y counties," said Miss A. ziV u lx business of the Southern P acific ca and has a population equal to America’s trade with Canada is of the Elk river gravel, it is under- the Joint representativeshlp nomi- H Chezik, who returned to her I ( Illld Health Day -------------- that of N orth America and Europe now three tim es that of 1913. The sl°od that the crusher near the nation on the republican ticket All home in Portland last night. She President Hoover has designated' "" wv,t create new business for combined. In fact this area holds sugar production o f Hawaii In 1902 bridge will be operated practically candidates, four republicans and sPent “ versl days visiting her May 1, as Child H ealth Day. In the th* Oregon E lectric and parent all told nearly one-third o f the was in round figures 356.000 tons: 1,1 summer to build up stock piles onp democrat, accepted the invita brother- F A Chezik, who is head “child’s bids o f righto," he says, l,neR In the s ,,e t i region there are earth s combined population — 540.- in 1928 it was 90-tOOO tons In 1902 a" far BOUth aB Mussel creek and t|on of , hp B(,arh rham ber of a i™ “ n r,f 'he Coos Bay Lumber “'he Ideal to which we should strive already n,n* "awmllls and the ac- yonooo people on the Asiatic side practically no pineapples w e r e well toward Bandon on the north com m erce to publicly state their Co., a, Powers. They drove to Cur- *• 'hat there should be no child In <l u»8*"on by the Hill system open- and 13.000.000 on the American side packed; in 1928, 8.633,000 cases of Saxton & Looney, contractor, for candidacys before that bodv last ry county, her first trip there, on America that has not been born un- ,ng new markets, will undoubtedly The eleven states Included with- twenty-four cans each were packed the highway job. operate the crush- Tuesday night Reports from var- s,,n d "y Bnd »he Portland visitor d«“r proper conditions, that does not "'l'nu,a»,> addl»ional developm ent It in the western division o f the Unit- The sugar crop in 1928 had a value er and Roy Perkins handles a sub- inUM parts of the two counties c o n -' F“ ,d 8hp had hever seen such a I've in hygienic surroundings, that ha" bMn trad,' ,onal Hill policy to ed States Chamber of Commerce, of approximately $95,000.000. and con'r««' covering the hauling of tlnue to Indicate lh a t lz>uls 1. i love|y »he ocean, such lux- ever suffers from undernutrltlon, b“ lld branch l,nM and feeders and and of course Including Hawaii, are the pineapple pack of 1928 was ‘he gravel. Knapp, the present Incumbent, is ’»riant shrubbery or exquisite wild »hat does not have prompt and ef , " *ecure developm ent of the re- Callforala, Oregon, W ashington, worth approximately $39 594.090. a -------------------- In the lead, with the other three n °w ers as on that trip. She re- flclent medical attention and In- * 1" traversed to furnish tonnage. Montana, Utah, Wyoming, Nevada, clear gain over 1902 The value of Bridge Work contestants following In the order »urned home last night, taking with «pectlon, that does not receive pri- | P8P ° ng ron»‘,mpla‘cd projects Arizona, Colorado. New Mexico and the principal exports from the The work on the new Rogue river of Hunter. Chenoweth and Tlch her som e of the fam ous flow er, of mary instructions in the elem ents * 2 * . P , t**1 .tbe Idaho In 1913 the population of United States to Hawaii In 1928 brldge has movpd ,.l|ong wtth a rn o r The democratic candidate W ^ w e s t e r n Oregon, the rhododen-( of_hyglene and good health." 1 punmse the X g ’ n X c t r i c hM this district w as approxim ately 7 \ was $77.824 000 and comprised a There is greater magic to com e " L, . * rnc n.«s »mall force of men. but the contrac- H. Bennett, has no opposition for dron- w hich Is breaking Into blos If .May Day can be made a National E rt som, all over the country-side 1926.' 8light~ . J ’O.r„* t, rpmpndou" varie,y o f " »«t to r. are near the time for installing ,h * nomination .Child Health Day It can be used p L B”‘u "»*•"0"»* the tlm- than 11.000,000 people—a gain in far too long and too varied to even coffer dams so that the form s for The county judgeship fight for population during that period of attem pt to mention some f o r t v n er c e n t In fa ct t h e Th I r r, . v concrete u u v .e v e piers may be constructed, u c .™ 'h* — ----------------- ------ „ nol is not Track Megt Postponed l° lnt8r88‘ ‘b* In * soon bT’ c u t’o" detort"4to"w lth'th^ republican nomination growth of population on the P acific as compared“^ lth the ,rad7 Shipm ent of cem ent over the local “ «umlng alatm lng proportions. Owing to w eather conditions the W8,,are and health alternative of eventual confiscation co L t to ie^em : ‘ . r . h J k h on een ^ .Je d"pk Will bpgi" * 8 ™ " 'b apP— o L “ Lf > lir bp 111 *" II < OIA ™ k IIIVI'L — t scheduled for last gat- .............................. ... by taxation rnttat In r a o n n t arssnw. n /is-« a a. 1 a 1 . . . . 17*7^111 UUIIHfl vug- IIIVUIUI — —waev. x», 11 i* G illen lOT Iftflt S ftt- res. . t i X areaTer t h ^ t h ^ T n c ™ on ' C° mmerPe ’’ 'nd‘pa»'d of May The cement and all mater- 'he lead with the voters, with Walk urday afternoon was postponed but . J , * ’ Ch~ 1* arP Urged 8VO,Te I Probably other branch lines will »hT AtlJndc o o J ^ In a recent report of the secretary h(|S bppn purchaBpd |n Ca„ . er and Bowman running second at this tim e a definite date has not ,h p lr "wn Program W h .t-( follow to tap other regions and me Atlantic co a st o f commerce which says “The _ ... u . and third k . . » .. tw a . u«.«- i.«s no. , v, r , hp ceiebratlon a ,t ghould There 1. is an explanation for th i. ch chanses in the geographic v e o e r a n h l c d.strl- d .s .H - '“T f? r.n '* la a ’ n 2" d 68 "b'.PPT1 ? P? rt „ /J ’'" ’ . . been »8t da»* d-P*nds rhlldrpn I the Southern Pacific may be forced get. Tb8 The date depend« to a c)udp an ge. In ( 4 to make up the loat tonna<e by Both candidates for the republt- ,arK* degree on the wisheg of the and reason for the continuing west- button o f our export sales during V new extensions of its own. Compe- ward flow o f civilization T h i. Pa- the fiscal year just closed were for trUCk ,rOm P0 '"1 W edder- "°"""a »<‘”' t° r county commls- Riverton school, one of the partld- ciflc region produces 3 * billion th a m o a t wart In t h . . . m . d ir ~ H « „ b u rn »»oner are popular with the voters P»"»« Port Orford’s fastest man, Women’s Club ’ »»»Ion la a good thing for any mon- dollars worth of torm product, ev- « ,Z e oTCther rUnT veJ™ Fx ------------- *nd * r8*' C°nt88t '« Ne" R,C8 Uk8n ^»b b— W T Wh“*’ 8r ’ prP",d8d °P'y At raU thp War h*4*“ " try year It contains flR y per cent ports to Europe ~"rei£T X Hears of Highway -nUc.patod Whlie Commissioner c h ltl. Friday and the postponement m88»,n «; ' h' W omen’s club »wo system , w ill hasten the f »he standing merchantable Urn- toree per cent partly by reason of H aving heard so much about the »» bp 'Pading candl will probably enable him to take ™ »¿"day ab~ " c . d^ p~ " . L ° i haa of the president and vice president. laKK*d »»ehlnd largely through lack Oregon Coast highway during his date Boice prr.mi.es him a hard Par» »" »he meet. 8cr of the United State«, and cuts the actual decline In sales of grain It was decided to give a dance on i ot competition It will mean added lumber valued at $550.000,000 a y ea r,, to that continent, while to all the short visit here yesterday. John run for the nomination Fclinwo n f <<nn ,b * n,ght ot May 10 »° raJa* funds I Payrolls, population and prosperity, The political pot should begin to /m p loyln g in this industry 225.000 rest o f the world we sold sixteen Leslie, of Chicago, president of the up. t DI nun pay thp ot thp de|e<ataa i If not for the railroads, at least for _ persons It is one of the great and one-half per cent more in value 8lgnede Steel Strapping company, holt more furiously all along the On schedule tim e the eclipse of to the .convention Thursday after ,h8 com m unities effected and the _____ _ ___ . ____ .. ___ ___ ___ .. ____ chartered a taxicab yesterday to llne from now to the date of the the sun bv th e tank „i.„^ .u i ----- ------' — — - fruit growing, gtock raising, d a iry -. than in 1927 28 The continent ■tat« a« a whole Ing and poultry sections of the showing the greatest Increase was Lak’’ him over the routine to Eur- Primaries, and as many things may yesterday and smoked glasses and held" in t'he'T ft.m Jm ^bm * th J H f f f w°rld. and contains vast deposits Asia, tw enty and one-half per cent rka. California. From there he will pp8n i” politics, for the forego- film s were in great demand. The c a n . i . c i . d tor t h . „ " ore and minerals, much coal, and But to no great trade region out-1 »« Francisco Mr I * s li. was 1 E orecast is made only on a size phenomena w a. plainly visible " n< J»**1’ «t will be Installed in the evening with large subterranean lakes o f oil. The <,|de of Europe was the Increase lees j here to look over the E vans Auto UP ° f »he situation at this tim e The regular monthly m eeting of Port Orford where atm ospheric con provision made for entertainm ent Rrcat length of this region and the than about eleven per c e n t It is to Loading company plant while on the Port Orford Library Board will dltions were Ideal to w itness It. J _____________ various elevations of altitude per-,'be expected that after m an u fac-1 a visit to the coast. W hile taking be held at the home of Mrs Mabel Scientists claim that It will be 4ft f ’hiwlr Traffl Street Improvement mlt the raising of all kinds of fruits tured goods became more Import- him through the battery separator years before another sim ilar eclipse „ ' « ITdlllC G illings on the first W ednesday In Monday a county crew started the °ccur« Sunday and Monday a check of May at 7 o’clock In the evening. All and farm products. ant In our foreign sales, the gain in factory. Beverley V Hancock, o f lauded the co sst work of scarifying Jackson street _ »raffle over the R oosevelt highway member« are requested to be pres This region contains seventy-two exports be chiefly In trade with the company, P*r cent of the potential w ater pow countries as yet little developed In route to such an extent that Mr from the hl<hwiiy to ftth atrpp, and Strawberries In M a r k e t ,7 “ n ’ t “ i nder th\ * upprvUion of ent U S ,,, decided to ta k e the trip 9,h Mreet from J a c k ™ .. ............ W„„am R o b ,„ 7 ¿ i d s y ’ ^ u g h t X Vhe s t a « ^ ^ ^ ^ ’» *r in the United States. It can Will ¡m anufacturing Industries Pp said that its vast w ater supply • The reason for the rising import A. P Johnston and Don Oxley Mr« Anna Adolphaen, Misa Kate authorlzed’ thls woTk J . T 8 ^ 7 ■tPa* b8rr,'’H ° f 'h “ •» various points In Ooos and Curry • ’ll bring forth new w ealth from a i anee of the Pacific as an Intema- authorized thia work test fall to be eon and p l« -.d them o-, sa-c counties These checks occur .v ery Saturday were engaged In hauling fertlle soli; that its. coal, oil andi»iona] highway will be Indicated gravel for the repair of the market th« road along the north aids of Garri •a ter power will generate In e z -' '-v some sllttlf Insight Into the haustible power for m anufacturing! erogrrss made byour eleven wert son lake. The gravel was obtained Purposes N ow here In all the world I (C ontinued on page 1). on the McKenzie ranch on Elk Library Board to Meet river.