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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1908)
SUNDAY, JUNE 28, 1908. 10 Right at the Moutli of the Columbia River m.rin ofnroi has hav heen discovered in paying: quantities across the Columbia River from Astoria at Onieda, Washington, has been important enough to a number of well-known reliable partiesjto cause ; the organization of the Pacific Coast Gas & Oil Co., with a capital stock of $300,000. This company has just placed a number of sharesjof stock on the market at the low price of $50.00 per share. KbAU ihm- t THE MORNING ASTOHIAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. What the Company Is The Pacific Coast Gas & Oil Co. is composed of reliable business men of Oregon and Washington whose only purpose is to develop the property to the best of its ability and produce a paying mine 'of oil and gas that all who have purchased stock may share in its profits. The officers serve with out salary and include among them some of the most reputable citizens of the State. To make the company strong on account of its brilliant fu ture it has secured leases on over 6000 acres of land. It has obtained the highest expert authority on the geological formation of the land, employed tLe strongest expert work men to operate the drilling apparatus and given such other evidence of goefci faith to warrant any man making an investment with them. Alex Sweek, president, Portland. Clayton S. Barber, sec and treas. R. A. Wade, vice-president Directors John Nelson, Oneida, Wash.; Geo. L. Hutchins, Portland; Wm. Anderson, Deep'Kiver, Wash. The plant is now in constant opera tion. The drilling is being done under the supervision of two expert oil well operators. You can see them at work any day of the week at Oneida right opposite Astoria. The picture opposite is a view of the derrick in actual operation. 4 V V-- :t: If you have any doubt as to the sta bility of the com pany, or in the manner in which it'is operating, be fore you make any investment visit the property any day and satisfy yourself. '.Oil and gas will be found in paying quanti ties. After the "strike" it will be too late to buy stock. Do it NOW. StocK for Sale For Development Pa o?e The per value of the stock it $100 per share, but ii now offered at one half ($50) and it it worth It The ' company hat already sold limited amount of stock, equipped the prop erty with the beat working machinery in the world and it has plant for a , great future. The money tecured from the sale of ttock wilt be to push the work. Every dolar will be used to prepare for the best interest of the company. At the drill goet down the ttock will surely rise. The price it it now offered at will only be thort time. A good rule it to let oppor tunity in when it knocki at the door. Tor an investment there it nothing more tangible, brighter or more turer dvidend paying than this ttock, par ticularly at $50 per thare. Don't wait until it goet to par, but buy now. It is really a chance that comet seldom. Further particulari at the addrettet given below. IP y fu H I urn .ts v mi Li la J -i mi j lult rmprrini Rinrk PnrtlnnH Orwon. HiViHns ix Warren. Savings Bank Building:, AstoriaOregon, VV......v,v.u. w.v , . 0 C ' THE TIMBER SUPPLY And What Will Happen When It Gives Out FIND WOOD SUBSTITUTES guilders Are. Already Experimenting " to Find Something to Take the Place of Wood, Especially Around the Large Cities. What are houses going to be made of when there is no more timber? That is a question which, in these days of disappearing forests, cannot be dismissed as "academic." There is no better proof of the reality of the "destruction of the forests," of which so much has been heard recently, than the outlay necessary for even a simple frame dwelling. In the short period of ten years the cost of a home has increased from 30 to 60 per cent., according to whether it is near a source of lumber supply or in a thick ly settled section far away from the woods. Government experts have covered the country with their investigations, and they report that the time is not far off when the country's timber will be gone. This means that other things must be found to take the place of wood. The United States Government has established labora tories at various centres, for the purpose of testing all sorts of structural materials. The results of these tests are published from time to time, and in this way engineers, architects and contractors are inform ed as to the capabilities of the mater ials. Only within the last year or two has general interest in the diminish ing timber supply been aroused, The recent Conference of Governors, called by President Roosevelt, was due chiefly to the report of the offi- j-'uicaici, viuuiu iiuuivi, w tut. President. To the condition which made the Conference necessary may be traced, also, the invention of novel htiildimr materials. One example of this is Thomas A. Edison's unique' idea of making huge moulds and pouring concrete idto them "houses made while you wait;" but nobody has yet been bold enough to put thjjJ idea into practice. Then there .are other forms of concrete and cement which have been proposed, all more or less in the experimental stage at present. Thus there is a constant attempt to employ for building the only sub stance of which the supply is unlimit ed, the soil of the earth itself. Espec ially is this so in and near the big cities, where the scarcity of timber and the consequent high prices are felt most seriously. For here the difference in price between a frame house and a house of more solid material is so small as to be unim portant, Illustrative of the general tendency to find substitute for wood ' is the suggestion of Mr. Herbert M. Wilson of the United States Geological Sur vey, that scientific investigations into the properties of clay be' undertaken. The American Ceramic Society made a start in this direction, by appoint ing a special committee to report upon a plan "for systematizing the study of clay products." Individual builders, meanwhile, have gone ahead and demonstrated the practicability of their ideas. Last year the Building Department of New York Citv. for the first time in its history, received plans for a terra; cotta house. The plans were passed upon favorably; and the house, which belongs to a professor in New York University, has just been completed. In the suburbs around New York there have been put up, recently, terra cotta . dwellings. The principal element in them is the hollow tile block the same kind of block that is used for fireproofing the "sky-1 scrapers" on Manhattan Island. It is j manufactured from New Jersey clay, and in the prooess of manufacture is; subjected to a heat of 2,200 degrees, j In 'the walls and partitions the blocks are set end on end, so that the hollow spaces form continuous perpendicular pipes. These hollow spaces make the walls non-conductors of heat, and thus tend to keep the house warm in winter and Cool in summer. In the floors the blocks are laid between beams of steel or rein forced concrete. With both walls and floors made of terra cotta, each room is enclosed with fireproof material, and fire could not easily spread from one room to another. The second man who submitted to the New York Building Department plans for a terra cotta house was Amos L. Schaeffer, engineer of the Public Service Commission. Instead of letting the job to a contractor Mr. Schaeffer employed laborers and him self oversaw the construction of the walls and floor. By this he saved morfey, the frame costing him only $2500. Once the frame of hollow block is built, the cost of a house depends mostly upon the "frills" the interior, finish, trimmings, decoration, etc. The exterior surface of a house of this type is covered with a stucco of whatever color the owner chooses. When the work is all done there is no way of telling what is under the stucco, whether wood or brick or tiie. The original cost of a terra cotta house is perhaps 10 per cent, greater than that of a frame building .of similar size. The ultimate saving is effected through smaller maintenance charges and insurance premiums. Some architects have made a spec ialty of fireproof dwelling houses, planning homes that cost anywhere from $5,000 to $40,000. Only last year two handsome terra cotta residences were built at Englewood and Mount Kisco, suburbs of New York, at a cost of about $40,000 each. At almost the same time a terra cotta "cottage" with nine rooms, was put up at Briarcliff, another stiburb, for $6,500, Since the introduction of automo biles the safe storage of large quanti ties of gasolene has become a prob lem for the builder. Wood is of no value here. In the big cities the law requires the building where gasolene is kept . to have none but fireproof materials 'in them. Accordingly, many of them are being made of clay products throughout. An in stance is the tile garage built recently by Mr. Dave Hennen Morris, former President of the Automobile Associa tion of America. Other owners of private and public garages have fol lowed his example. Perhaps the most significant single effort toward the substitution of other materials for wood is the pro posal to extend the fire limits of New York to include the whole greater City. If the Aldermen pass such an ordinance, it will mean that no more frame houses of any kind may be built in the metropolis. Ten years ago this plan would have had .no chance of success; now it has a good chance, simply because the high price of lumber has made the cost of a fireproof house relatively small, and has heretofore removed or weakened the desire of builders to use wood. A DYSPEPTIC ODE Let poets rave, as poets will, About the heart's control, And in their lofty lyrics still Us vital worth cxtrol; I, who' must walk in humble ways And modest muses woo, I write this simple song to praise The liver good and true. Pray tell me what are hearts to men What's anything, alack! To us poor bilious creatures when The liver's out of whack? While sentiment, I grant it ,is Quite proper in its place, Yet when we get right down to "biz," The liver sets the pace. So let's not to the dreamy bards' Soft caroling succumb, . For he who clearest truth regards Will keep his liver plumb; He knows full well a heart may bless A moral, in a way, But oh! it's quite "N. G" unless . His liver's all "O. K." And here and now I make my plaint To all the cooks: Beware On what you feed us, for a saint On bile-distressing fare Must soon become a demon! Yes, You guide us, day by day, For piousness and biliousness Go different paths, they say. Success Magazine. Subcribe for the Morning Astorian, J OCL All our wines and li quors are guaran teed under the Pure Food Law. AMERICAN IMPORTING CO, 589 Commercial Street WORKS 3K Wholesale and Retail Whitmans Book Store John Fox, Pres. F. L. Bishop, Sec. Astoria Saving Baak, Treas. Nelson Troyer, vice-rres. ana &upi ASTORIA IRON WORKS DESIGNERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF THE LATEST IMPROVED ... Canning Machinery, Marine Engines and Boilers COMPLETE CANNERY OUTFITS FURNISHED. Correspondence Solicited. Foot ol Fourth Street