ROSEBURG TO BE THE GREAT CENTRAL JUNCTION The Mooted Question SettledChief Engineer Kinney, in Making the Selection, was Influenced by Natural Conditions Only Work Progressing. "COOS BAY'S COME OUT." GREAT NATURAL RESOURCES OF DOUGLAS COUNTY What the Evening Telegram Says of a Region Now Th 2 County Contains 24,009,009,000 Feet of Standing Timber Her Soil a Deep, Reawakening to New Life and Vigor. - Rich Alluvial, and her Climate Mild aud Equable r -J-' I i- Quito a coutrorersy has lieen on 1e tween Eoseburg and Eugene, says a Portland exchange, in the matter as to which of these two points was to be made the junction ioint lietwoeii the Great Central and the Southern Pacific. Reference as to these matters is made '"elsewhere in this is-ne. Chief Engin eer Kinney was at Eoseburg the other day. In order to settle this mooted point, there should be no higher authority than the gentleman him self. ' As was to l expected, the eople of Eoseburg were very anxious to know, and a representative of the Eoseburg reporter succeeded in getting the ear of Major Kinney. The Major is uniform ly considerate of newspaper men, and in answer to the pointed questions fired at him like ammunition from a Galling gun by the newsiwjH'r reporter man, lie replied in his usual emphatic way as fol lows : "Yes, sir 1 You may say to yonr readers that the Great Central will be built, and that Eoseburg will positively be the point of its intersection with the Rafting Scene South-jfn Pacific lines." "In this conclusion we have been in fluence. by' natural conditions only. There is no other route feasible for us. Ao.ntraet for the first division has al ready been let, and the grading between Mar-hfield and Rosebnrg, via Myrtle Toint, w ill be pushed as rapidly as men end money can accomplish the work, and while the rainy season" may delay operations in this section work will be pushed on other divisions where the conditions are u.ore favorable. Con struction work on the four-mile trestle between Empire City anu Marshfield is well under way, and the xrading force under Contractor Small will be increased as soon as the men and teams can be secured." Route Determined. 'Has the route through the Cascade range leen determined upon?"' "It has; and while it is no part of our policy to show our hand at this time, I can state positively that a route A MIGHTY MOVEMENT. The latest issue of The Paeific Miner is a particularly handsome number. It devo'.es considerable space to the Coos Pay region as well as the Great Central Eailroad Co'miany and its allied corpor ations. Under the title "The Oppor tunityThe Man; The Pacific The Orient,''this valuable publication prints an able w ritten article. The Plaix I'Kalkk feels justified in reprinting it, in part. The first excerpt follows: "Da the citizens and men of affairs in the state realize the mighty eouflict, the fierce struggle, the Titan ie forces that confront the captains of commerce and trade through the world politics in their strife for conime cial supremacy? TinrlTMIk t'fr e! srr CD CD. ! b iC&MMM ffijrt m rn:. s mmmmmmm Th j Great What 'plumed knight' of commere, marching dow n the aisles of trade w ill tarry the victorious banner? The bat tle will le grand, sjK-ctacular. Its Ti laijtic j.roiHjrtioiis wili make it enchant ing. The century-long march of the Onled States' j.rogress across the Jorth Americtu continent readied its limit at Pacific waters. It trembled awhile; by Ral W sea, then from the states laved by its tides leaped to the Philippines and China, after an instant's jause at Hawaii, and, lo!. world jiolitics tre change! in a t winkling, and the fo , tus of world market is shifted from nroie to the far Orient. lid what a might j stage it is, with through the range has been decided upon. ""We are asking nothing of the people of Douglas cohnty except their good will and in return we promise them a rail outlet from tidewater at Coos Bay to Salt Lake City, as soon as it is ossihle to construct it:" "Do you care to state what railway interests are ass.ciated in the enter prise?" "Further than the fact that promi nent Eastern railroad men are interest ed, and that not one share of Mock is for sale, 1 cannot speak of that mat ter." 'Do your plana contemplate the use of the Spreckels' road?" " "If the road can be purchased reason ably, yes.' If not, we Ehall set our stakes at Myrtle Point and proceed in dependent of the old line." "I infer lrom yonr statement that the locating engineers are on hand ready for business?" "They are. A locating force is .now at work on the west end, and the corps now with me will commenco operations ....j I, rT1 5 ft Jri .... on Coquille River--Orcat Central Railroai ... . from this oint. This force ,wil! le j will p-t out the piling for four miles of augmented by an additional ca from j trestle. D. V. Small, of Walla Walla, Portland. Seventy-five head of- horses j is already at work on a Contract for have been purchased at Eugene, and : grading the remaining three miles K the preliminary work w ill lecoimeneed ! tweet Empire City and Marshtield. He at once upon their arrival at Eos-burg.'" j has a dozen teams of his own at work. Major Kinny'5 Return. - and the re.munder of his fone be will j lure from among larmers of that vicini After an absence of two weeks at ,y C. E. Cook has taken a sub-cou-Coos Rav. Chief Engineer Kinney re-, tra,.t f(lf. ym, ,, Mj.rli,. p(iul ttirned Friday night to Tortland. Vlwn j towar,, 1:lScl1m w,iere ll(.avv he left Portland he sa d : "W e are getting ready for the great survey from Coos Rav to Salt Rake City, a distance of 1000 mill's. This survey commenced Octolier 15, and will con tinue all winter, for the Western end of the line. W bae secured 50 jiack horses and have yem ready at . Prine ville for ttie-surveyors' gangs. Wor k commenced on the wharves and trestles September 1st, the day that we prom-! ised construction would begin." j r)rooeei cref11v with certain ,K.rti..ns On bis returfi be stated to a repre- ! during the winter, and to have every scntative of a Portland per that he j thing ready for crowding const ruction had settled the route of.the railroad lie- a Betting well worthy the great actors that are to appear. "The Pacific ocean has suddenly !e cme the storm center of the mightiest commercial conflict of the ages. ."The old world .olitics centered around the Mediterranean,, an inland sea ; those of today encircle the might' iest of oceans. It is characteristic of the change that has taken place that the hew forces are capable of acting across its expansive reaches with evan greater ease and rapidity t'lan the forces of a few generations ago operated on this almost infinitely smaller . field. And, since time has liejime the measure of distance commercially, the Pacific has shrunk until it is now only one fourth as large as the Mediterranean Central Railroad Hotel to be Built at was in the old days of classic Greece. For a 21-knot vessel can steam from the docks of Portland, San Francisco or Coos Ray, Oregon, in one-fourth the time it took the old Greek merchant or pirate vessel to sail 2000 miles from the Phoenician coast to the pi' lars of Herculeh. "What opjtortuiiities lie here for bold leaders brave captains of commerce? - "Rut Americans are equal V) the occa sion. There age the Hills, Harriinans, and others. , "Rut the far western man the Pacific coast man shall. , be heard from. He has already entered.; the 'arena. ; His name is on the gladiatorial lists, and he I twecn Coos Ray and the Southern Pa cific that it would practically lie the route of the Coos Ray, Eoseburg & Eastern, forming the junction at Kos burg. His plan is to build up to the present line of the Coos Ray, Eoseburg & Eastern at loth ends, then buy the Spreckels road if ft can le had on rea sonable terms ; if not, to parallel that road. This does away witli all possibili ty that the road will get out. by way of Drain or Eugene. . Chief Engineer Kinney, in adverting to his statement made prior to leaving Portland, as outlined in the alw.ve, said in his characteristically direct way: "I told you sometime ago that wc would begin act ive construction work on the tailroad by Septomlier 1. Well, it was September 3 when the work was practically liegun. That was not a bad miss, was it?" . ' In a big undertaking like the present, in order to expedite the work, it is unite common practice to sublet contracts for certain portions of the work.. iJn this matter it may be of interest to know that Henry Sengstacken, of Marshfield, i- ...i i, r i r Countiy J cut are to be made. He has 75 horses in Eugene that were started out on the new work Friday. Oregon w inters, as a rale, are ii"t conducive to rapid work in the matter ! of railroad construction. As a conse quence, the Empire Construction Com pany will not attempt the attainment of that which may prove paljably iin- issible. It is its iiitntiin to cet tin- ork on?:lnizoj .i.,- the line and in the -pnng. will face the mighty conflict with all that superb strengt h, energy and brill iancy that is thei nheritance of the West. "llon this mighty commercial stage, the world or an audience, Tie will play a leading role?' The Pacific Miner then pays high tribute to Chief Engineer Kinney of tie Great Central Railroad Comjiany. AVhat the company promises to accomplish is outlined and the article concludes as fob lows ; ' "What poUntiuhtylthe future holds! English merchants in the far East have said that Manila would rival Hong Kong, next to Liverpool the greatest shipping Krt in the world. Now, see where Coos Ray is at the door of this vast region. The Orient is its nc'ghlx.r, ceo -m cn om m od mmsm tfoseburg. but is no longer asleep, or aloof and sclf Kutihicut. The vague, dreamy, remote 'far East' is near and real." iH-wey at Manila made the coast of Asia a tangi ble thing, a thing, a thing, which the farmer of Oregon, the manufacturer, the mechanic, the teacher, has an immedi ate interest iu. It is all a huire market. more extensive and more densely popu lated than EurojK!. And Coos ilay ami the new terminal city' of Rangor, backed by its unrivaled natural local resources, is the ample natural geographical har bor, for all the vast commerce of Asia and the islands of the adjacent seas. .."The situation is full of promise. "It is uprecedented and unparalleled. 3 urns 233) Vnder the title, "Coos Ray's Come- Out, "The Evening Telegram of Portl- is building a road from Gray's Harbor to aiul printed an interesting article the some point on Pnget Sound to get tint otherday. Since it has a direct liearing her out to tidewater. Possibly a road upon a subject that is now greatly at- from Coos Pay may lie built eastward trading public attention, the Eoseburs and make connection with some trans Pi.AiNiK.u.r.it takes pleasure in reprinting continental line in which case the liar-it-. It is as follows: bor will receive all the appropriations it It is indeed hinh time that Portland I business men were -making connection and establishing relations with Coos Ray. A development todescri!e which the over used word tremendous would not be out of place is iM-ginning in that long-neglected and Ecmidieuighted region. Not but what the cople who were there were doing well cnou'di. but the vast wilderness on one side,' the vaster ocean on the other, one contain- ing tens of millions of wealth, the other a highway to every 4rt on. the irlole. where but little appreciated, or used, "Rut a change has come. Men are crossim the mountains to C.mw Pji v l.vl hundreds, by thousands. The forests light di losing the wealth and.advant are thronged with seekers, most of whom a8e8 of tbat region after so maty years is nsiuillv tin, ca-e. have com u o late to seenre w hat thev wished.- They found out the value of the liiii'Hj- aftfir most of them had Kvd (ini. tlv 'V'obbled I ui," f..r some syndicate, as has hai.uened all srlr.ii-the owt. Eit'-.er the law i t. !.... i.r it 1j-. ii ,i.-,!n,i..iJi.r. ed. to allow i!,i: vet in M'ito of it. theie ;tl n...w.r5.M.;ti.. ,ml u,r- f..r n I real niiml vr . f i eople i;i the South-! wotern Oregon, of which Coos Kay is mix! i- the main . enter, .luring the next lew years; jes, lor many yea " N olu.ibic T.'nitcr Tiacts. "The tinsltcr is there, thousan is of, millions of ft l t of i , and it i- becoming very valuable i:ow.'Raiir.nls iil v . 1 - re it UYO 1: --. in. m IV fit "r ' f . hite Cedar Tree Near RoseburgGreat Central Railroad Country. We are in the f.c is of the great events which have Is-cn imtkiiu another uud greater Eastern (piestion than Russia and England dreamed of a quarter of a century ago. Tlio commercial front of Asia is not hm er on the Rosphorns, but on this Pacific coast, and when con- nected .lircrt w ith th :reat trauscon- tineiiUal lines of raihvav through fro:n the Atlantic what more natural, place than Cos Ray for great-traffic to center. "Remote from the populous cities and states of our ow n country,- this Empire of the Vt bc-oiis to see the fulfillment of itsow u projiheries, but ('i)in all un-ex-te.l ijiiai tcr, and in.a way no sa gacity could fore.M'.. The great world-inti-rests w lii. Ii ijuicki-a natural pulses have been -nM -n'v transferre.1 to the I'acilie, ni. l ibis hi.i.nl expanse .f Jwater is no iiM.re a "mel.u.eholy waste." but grows jiopulmis with ships, white with sails of commere , and since the nation now extends far into the Pacific, Amer ican tiaditions, education, life and lili erty go as trade los, with the (lag." SOME SIGNIFICANT FACTS - ' : When the pr ijected line from Salt LakotoC.Mis Ray was first' announced to the public, Chief Engineer Kinney was cxlreiuely careful in all his state ments lo the newspaper men at Port land vs to whether the line was to he come a mere local line or the link in n new transcontinental system, 1'roni time to time, as the, reHrts on the pre liminary survey came iu at headquarters, they were in turn transmitted to the Eastern party or parties whoso capital was guaranteeing the enterprise. As the reports were submit tod and built through it, as the Northern Pacific needs. The big coloration get nearly everything; they can do anything, Hut whv complain? If there were no lig coronations, to do these things they would not 1 done. v "Coos Ray will scarcely liccome a rival of the Columbia River, or Marsb- field, of Portland to hurt, but the truth is that the region around Coo Rav is going to witness wonderful activity and developemeut in the near future. Not only is there vast wealth of timber, but there is also coal. And there is dairy and farming land, ton. . "T,,c apitalists who are bringing "0oS Ray out of the Inists and into the live in San Francisco or in Eastern citi' Tl'py J"'1'1 caTe '"ut I'ortland Nttier do . the Coos Iiy jop!e, for '"' never hud much ( banc to get ac- '"xinted with our caj.italists and busi n''n- Dut no ,l""',t we can do buMiie's there, if the proi.er effort is "'ade Coos Ray is nearer to Portland than to San Praiirisco. The Pacific ,Hl';" l'li,.v" n" favorites. j n.akiug any comiuirisoiis i.1" advantage of any oilier w-ctiou of I r -g in for each so-tion lias its gr-st aiant.igt s and its many opirtuin:ic it may le remarLi.! that the come out if S.iiih-we'tfrn Oregon, with Cofs Rav n the f-n-us, iluring the next lOor I-j years, is goinato Ik worth watching -ii V. i: iVr"-' transmitted. Chief Engineer Kinney become more aud more hopeful that the line would indeed form the outlet to the Pacific of a new transcontinental sys tem. It would not seem that the number "13" . was s i unlucky as tme ' siiMTslitious oople. On .August 13 the 1 chief cngyieer. ' tif mt.r ii iinf.ii.ii-.wl fi. ftli.k t-,il ro id reorter of the Portland Orcgoiihn an important fact. Chief Engineer Kiim.-y di-elarcd that the trans.ontiiictal feature of the Ooos j Hay Railroad had lieen accepted and he 1 had lieen directisl to make locatiou of the line through to Salt .Ijike City. This acceptance, he said, provi.U for IhiikUii the road at f bi.tKl) a mile, in volving in round number f .i,(!(tii,tKMl, tli.titiih the exact distance- l.eUve n Coos Ray and Salt Lake City over the new route has not yet leeii determined. .More than thi , Mr. Kinney an nounced that a railroad would be built to reach between San Francisco and Portland along the coast. Tnis will not 1k a irt of his enterprise, but he says it will be built by capital friendly to the Cos "Ray-Salt I.ake line. It is understood that it will lie an extension of the California NorllAvestcni, which now reaches northward from Sail Fran- eisc Ray lo I'kiah, in Mendocino Coun ty, a distance of 112 miles, and has a line surveyed thiough to Eurela, on llumlioldt Ray. Major Kinney snys he has no knowledge of the dvtails of that enterprise, but ho is assured it S; ill I hi built. Tillamook Ray has leen men tioned iu connection with it, and it may be that Portland's railroad toTillj.nio-ik will form a section of Cue througt coast lineb 'tween Portland and San Francisco, It is probable that during the CMiiing i - t Douglas county, in common with all the Oregon country west of the Cascade mo intain range, is a garden sot. The geueral character of the soil in the val ley is alluvial, deep, rich and produc tive of grain, grasses and vegetables coi imon to the tcmjierate zone. The cot nty is jM culiarly adapted to shick- raiiing, from the fact that domestic ani mtls, cows and working horses, pick up their own living in the open air all the veeir round. The county contains 24,000.000,000 feet of standing timU-r, In the valleys aud foothills oak is the dominant sjiecies. The Castile and Coast Range mountain sloM-s aro vast forests '( tir, pin an'd celar. Iire tiiulnTed areas are abni" the I'mpjua and its tributaries. Pong la county has ipiartz t'nd placer mines. ' The remarkable character of the tim- Ix-r land. of loiilas comity, has already lns'11 ineiiti'.!!.-.! in the treating of Oos count y.'whic'i it adjrtns The facilities ii r harvesting the timlier pn.ltirtion of the country are m far inferior to those etisting in Co., w hich for a certain dis tance inland and.cuvering an iiitrtant . n; V.M m TV.. ' in v Lojrcmr area is inlercte 1 by slonghs, - ruiit - ling the navigation lumU-r craft or the ll-..i:in ij rafts, that, except near the Fii pjua rier and the line 4 Use Soul hern Pacilic railr.!-! line, the for - et have m.t lvn scarred bv the V of iTiiMi om f.-vt h. in., which were cut and markete.1 last yeaK . Tin- attention of the l.pu'ialten has therefore ljeen turn"-l, naturally, to those branches of industry that best re pay the. cost 'A diilicnU transja-tatioii. ithat while iu C there are three ami one-half acre of improvel fiirni lanler unit of Ki!alion, there are in I.nght eiht and one-half acres to each jierson. In the near prosvi of issesing rail road facilities for the transportation of lumber, there have lvn 33 tiniU-r land entries iu the magnificent forests of the county, for the past month. Agriculture. The annual average rainfall during the Ltt tan years has been less than in Go, which lies more directly on the coast, where it was 47 inches, while in fkmglas it was .". inches. The soil is fertile and produces all eraius, irrasvs ana r.ol crops. Mrn makes a valuable crop in IVxiirla conn- i tv. - Fruits, such as aj.4es, tears na prunes, are now King shipped to Eat- ern markets while, peaclieo. strawlr- ries aud every other variety of 81lwll , tlie line of th SUiern Pacific nulnxid. fruits are ship.ed to the nearest towns j "Hrr is a nionntain of nickel ore in si!i andtothe neighboring states, and he-!" t,,r "r Ri'tdie, on the Southern ing earlier here than in any other conn- Pneilic railnwd. Its extent and value tv, find a ready and pn.fi table market. ! 'w Unn thoroughly tested by I nite.1 ' Four million ve hundred thousand ' -ite t'overnmeut exjns and ethers. Iuuds oX dried prunes were produced Californa rsons have Cnite.l States in IWghia last year, aud all shipied patent to one thousand acres. Recent lr winter the lines Jof the survey for the Great Central w ill be suiliciently de finite so that the driving of piles across the southern end of Great Salt Rake for tht eastern terminus of the line will In come an accomplished fact. This an nouncement iray l6 consider'-il 'authori tative. Chief Engineer Kinney further Slated that separate articles o Incof 1 oration for the Salt I.ako end would 1k filed in due coursu. While Chief Engineer Kjnney is fol lowing out his instructions to make or manent location for the Grrat Central roa 1, lie is too experienced a ' nan to East. No statistics are at hand concern ing the production of apples, peari, etc. ; but the quantity has been large, and not commensurate with the demand. Dairying Douglas county has an iniortaut cat tle and livestock industry, but so small a proportion of cleared land is devoted to the pasture of milch cows that no mod ern creameries have leen establi.-hcd, 'the farmers shipping their cream to other .obits for manufacture, while there is here green feed the year round and four cro of alfalfa are raised in a single season, wiui otner dairy . lora-'C crops, without irrigation. Strange a it mar appear, there are few creameries and few silos, and yet the region tributary to the- Southern Pacific railroad line exported l.-mt year 50,000 i.onnds of butter. Douglas county offers an ideal open ing for practical dairymen to f-stablish a lucrative business. Mines and Oresl Douglas County. jftMigias county is abun.lantly sup- pliel with a gr.-at variety of niin-r.ii ki.. S ( k . . s Scene on Coquille kiver Ureal Central j Tin-early miner confiued his search for j gold to the gulches, creeks and river j channels, working over the grave! by j prini'uive method, while now the same ! channels, including the aijacvnt bi'd- ; mdes and table lands, are d tted with great hydraulic plant,, wrashiug oct tHusaii.ls of dollars V the fewKince of ydd dn?t nnder primitive roethol. Jtiart.reefs extending the wi-hh of the o.unty, from 'h to north, and cover ing strip forty mile!' wide, are lving ojm-l op many points. Conimies have ln established and extensive mills have beu erected in many places, with all mleni appliances for saving, (iw guld. Others are getting out I a-e ores, containing pM, silver and copjer, ranging in value fnim a few dollars j-er ton on the surface, as they gt deepT running into hundreds in many cases. Tlieir further development is dependent iion the advent of more capital to erect smelters, of which there are at pre-ent none in IVagla county. Copper ores of high grade exist in jay ing quan tit U-( in many districts. Rich cinnabar iu paying quantities extends over a great area of the conty. It has lwvn Hoelled during the ast thirty t i" the iiortlterxa .f tlie C"ntty, ntl recently f.mnd near the south "n o-miniary, in vow .reeK canyon, on Logging Train on Coos Bay. jump at cojtclusioiis. He sjiys that the S'eliminary work will take at least ree months. Inasmuch as railroads cannot 1 built as rapidly as the public expect or as quickly" as a line can be drawn with a lead pencil on a map from one poiut to another, it is probable, as the chief engineer says, that active con struction work is tint likely to lx-gln lie ore next spring. Our Infant Industries. The output of nine Industries iu Ore gon for V-Kf2 figures as follows ! dumber ;. lO.QOO.uoo cropping? of the Kama metal have U-en discovered in adjacent t.-rritory. Chrome irr.n and Fmestone in great abundance are f iund tnearthe nickel ore. Near Eoseburg ar exb-nsive lnnllTtA rnarbhi, which for durability and varie ty of beautifnl coloring rival the best marbl.-H of Vermont att.l Tennesfce. Several tf;ecim-3 tok fir.-t T!ze at the Chicago Ei.o!tr.n in IS'C. pouIas county has a mountain r f practk'alljr puic hydraulic cement assaying 'M pr cent. The Cinpjua Coal l! Company lias len forme. 1 lr-re, with a capital of $ 100,00, to U.re for oil. Tj surface in dicstiofis an l tln'jf'icti strata are as favorable as in any of the California dis tricts. The I'ljipij'ia Vali. y Oil Com pany has a frM- !.;.-5 lx.ring plant in o-ration at Myrtie C-k, twenty miles south of Ro-ebiirj. TlnTe is every rea "n to llieve that coal oil in faying 'ptantiiic can I- found in rcit-ral dis trirts afljacent lo R-o?ir-( an I railroad traiisr-rta!;on. Wry strong ;ri-: ar- hcatel -i ----- 1 XtAruaj cnir:uy n--ar th" rai!rod, wiii.-i by p;ti;.-er setters l"-r t:: of sa't. in the early fe-.: const v. Arraci-ijif-nts v.ef UtilizetJ e inamfartare ;.-me..t of this. a now in pr-gre-' for the insta!'a!i-::i tf a niol ern pia-at to cake salt f r n.arkct. Extent aiui Needs c-f Douss County. D.dij? s cr-.nty Lsj x.p'iULon lit H.'i", o.ver- a:i arei of :;,l-iO.-.0 aces, and is a'-.ut r'ghty ruii. . w:-te frota west t' e.ist- Ir .-rtt'emvat has been stimulated by the or.s:mc;i"a of the SM5thern Fa i jc li.ie. th-if:,:"! running north and so;h a'..i;g tleextrtm westrti Killer oi theo!i:y. Tlie grand afiv-.!T .f county is an east-an l-wet railr.xi.l lice that will bring it prol;! ins of niiue. farta and fon-st i.ito easy acc.sit.Hl;:y to Kie coo.-t or an Eastern n.ark. t. B-t, not withstanding ihe adverse conditions, subject to envrn:o:s charges for iu roun-Latwuit tmnspcrtati-n, ti:e rvng"jL3 ci.ur.ty tir, know n gr'teral'T as Orvn pine, has won fr itself a same in lani ber maikets, for obvious rea-vns, grow ing as it does t cut market frt.m 3) to 10 inches in diaa:eter an.1 1-) to 3X) feel hih, the average l"rg W to 72 inches, and fnrnistiir.g bri-tge timbers 110f--et long, free from knMs, pi'.ch rin-gs and all imirfectioi-.s. " The tireat Cettral rii'.r.vi.l now build ing from C j E.y and f f which wre make mention elst.'where, will be a very important factor iu build In it up the com mercial acriru't-iral arid hr.nber bosi" nes ! laughs county sn-l tlus road, when in ojn-raiion, wou'd pay haalsome divi i. n-Is (r-'in the hal business of thi county indepn.lent and alone. l.ie.t.-vk (iraiil Minerals Hops Flsn., Wool , Fruit I "airy product.. V-COO-OH) S.7 s,t,tXo oIIO.iliM ;?..' K.tvo .ts..t1J :.'..'. coo l.-t.vliX) l,-V.000 Total.. ,..,.II.Cm0,OOO tt will Iv secji iivm these uure that lumber leads, w ith live.t.ick a close sec ond and grain riht at the hevls oi the HvestiH'k estimate TheJII,0!,(V;a is c.,n.ii to .n for every man, woman and child in the statv.