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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 11, 1912)
' . ' .... . ; ' - . , ., THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, .PORTLAND, SUNDAY.. MORNING.' AUGUST 11. 1911 10 it mm .1 . OVER STATE Four Farmers Buy Tracts in i Burns District" $35,000 . peal Near Centralia; Other Good Sales. On of the Important land deals re- leently mad at Burns, was the sal of Isectlon 11, township 23, range SI, Just 'cast of this- city by the Oregon ft West- tera ColoniaUon company, to four prac tical farmers who recently arrived at ;Burns,wlth their families from Carson Valley, Nev. I TWa section of land Is Just west of tie-experimental station and is one of !th btst,sections In the vast holdings lot the company. A portion of It can (soon be put in fine shape for alfalfa, isoma 120 acres lying along a slough nd the new owners will lose no time In (retting It lto cultivation. The men who (purchased the tract are W. H. Stock, H. jworthmann, H. Henke and u. luae- anann. Ther brought their own teams land machinery and the purchase was mads after a thorougn investigation ana tour ot the country. These gentlemen (will all work together in the develop- ment of this tract of land and in this war tie energy and capital will be used ts tns best advantage. I'll; ' wrXr; MOI t41I&w , ' - J VJVw in ' iT1tiiBWiiiir'wwiiiil'ii i i ' . ! ". n Wills rer InTlllambok last wee. K. Turner, of Banks, ran across an 80 acre dairy farm that suited him, ana ths price being reasonable, $S00 an acre, ha bought it. The land Is a part -of ths F. B. Norton f arm, which Is located on a fine road three and one-half miles ast of Tillamook city. There are no buildings on it, but every foot of It is rH-tKHinwr-Tna-MKT-jlt-titTmtnTmgfc 1 ; t JLbnnt a vear aso J. IS. Lease and James Churchill, of Centralia, and Charles " Edwards,- of Boistfort, pur chased the Griffith farm, near Boist fort, paying $30,000 for the VS7 acres. This week S67.S4 acres of this land was sold to Seattle parties for $35,000, or t(000 .more than the whole tract cost en year ago. The money has not been turned over on the deal, but the papers are "being prepared. ii'Mrs5J. W. Irvine has purchased a ten acre tract of S-yar-old pears a short distance west of Central Point, from' Mrs. Eva Longacre. The consid eration was $4500. The sale was made by Charles D. Hoy. - The tract is said to be an excep tionally good one. The trees are large for their age and have made a uniform gTowthr-Mrs.' Inrtn Intends to Tnake her home on the tract and will Im prove It t a considerable extent. Four story and basement apartment house; under constructton by-Metropolitan I aveatment company fc Trinity Place. DURIHG WEEK OF . BUT FEW SALES Realty Associates Take Overi Healy Building - ana; Old Y. M. C. A. Structure; . Other Deals Reported. ( Cutter Commander Wins Pralsev. Washington, Aug. 10. Declaring that , his conduct "compelled admiration and deserved 'the highest praise." r'reaidet.t TaXt today wrote a commendatory let ter to Captain Perry, commander of the United, States revenue cutter" Manning, subdlvlslons-Holgata addition and Pros- fr "fcue work performed during the Last week's realty marktt was fea tured by the second largesUrutaction in business property of th yeaiKJHlf aside from that one deal. the trading was of . a negligible character and of small volume. The premier sale was the purchase by the Realty Associates of the Healy properties, located ,at .the northeast corner of Park'and Morrison andTat the northwest corner of-Ft)urth and Yamhill. The former II a single lot improved with a steel and terra cotta twojtory building and the latter Is a four story brick structure covering a Quarter of a block Which was form erly occupied and owned by the Y. M. C. A. . While the considerations of these deals was not made public,; brokers whs are familiar with values In the districts TRY OUT TESTS OF MNHENr AT HIGH PRESSURE Found That Plan Greatly Ac , celerates Hardening of Ce ment, Increasing Strength Many Hundred Per Cent. t;Tbe Kewberg Iand company has sold lto JohaBriggs, of Fratee, Minn., for Q. w;- Byers sr.,- a live room cottage on T1 - 1 - ...... 1 . . TJ . 1. ... ..( . JUinJUS DUTSl, UT7t TT ecu T 1IL1I SIIC1 SIX Z. XI. -With lot 160x344, fof $00, and to Mr. Byers, for A. E. Peat, a seven room cot- se on me corner or nun ana Houtn fcchooL With lot EOxlOO. for tl00. TPX: Morris, of the Newberg Land rom?Miy, inaB iraaea iour acres or land yest , of Newberg, for property at Mc Minn villa, and sold nine acres a mil west of Kewberg for Frank Eckerson, A tlAAil In II VT ml vt.l. c,,i Negotiations for the T. E. Miles green house property, which have been under ray,for a few months, have finally been .r viuficu, iu, pince w aula larougn ine office of Donald M. Wall for $6500, to 2lr. O. H. Kilton, of Portland, who ex- yiects to contlnu-the- grenhoug busi- pess. Possibly th largest real estate eal pt the season was consummated this ."week, when Melvln Hansen, tha realtv Shan Johnson tract, of about 1000 acres, formerly known as the Dunn tract, at the edge of Eugene and due south of IfChula Vista Park, which was success- j fully sold out in small tracts by Mr. aiansen last year. Mr. Hansen will at once have, this tract carefully surveyed I and platted into lota of S acres and up, (making wide and scenic boulevards con- Couth Alder street It has been decided q call this tract the" "Dunn Acreage," having been for many years the delight ful tramping grounds of the well known ;uui;, iu, vuudiucibuuii 111 VI1IB irtin- jsactlon is not publicly given out, but is J said to be more than $50,000. ..,.,.,, L L. Engle, a New York banker, who ;,ycently visited Klamath Falls, made a 41B,000 realty investment in that city. T Washington D. C, Aug. 10. The bu reau ot standards, of the department of commerce and labor. In connection with the Investigation of structural materials, is conducting a series of tests to deter mine the action of high-pressure steam on Portland cement. It has been found that high-pressure steam will greatly accelerate the hardening of certain ce ments, increasing their strength several bundred-per -cent,., but- will causa the complete disintegration of other ce ments which under normal conditions appear to have the usual physical qual ities. The present investigation Is in part an extension of the work reported In technologic paper No. 5, "The Effect of High Pressure Steam on the Crush ing Strength of Portland Cement Mortar and Concrete." The equivalent for this purpose consists of a small steam-pressure tank, or so-called "autoclave? suit able for pressures up to 60 atmospheres (SIS pounds per square inch) and a large cylindrical steel tank 12 inches by t feet inside dimensions suitable for work ing pressures up to 70 atmospheres (1030 pounds per square inch). Kany Cements rail in Test. It has been proposed that specifica tions for the purchase of Portland ce ment be amended to Include a test of exposing cement to a steam pressure of 20- atmospheres 4 29 4 pounds .jex square Inch) for a period of two hours. It Is required that the cement remain sound and that the tension briquettes show a given Increase In' strength. It has been found tbatertaln cements which meet the steam test of 212 de grees Fahrenheit for five hours, as re quired by present specifications, fall un der the proposed high-pressure steam test. In Investigating the cause and In terpretation of this failure, practically all brands of cement purchased by the government are being subjected to the high-pressure steam test In connection withthe regular- routine .apeclflcaUon test, and much valuable information Is being accumulated. Tests are also being made on specially prepared cements of various degrees of linaneas and. altar .seasoning -Xfrt-dlf le-J ent periods. Other series of tests are being made In exposing cements neat, and in mortars and concretes to a series of pressures ranging up to 1000 pounds per square Inch and for various dura tlons. Tensile and compressive streneth. linear expansion and contraction, water absorption and other physical properties are being determined. The effect of for $175,000. In . the transaction he netted a handsome prof besides ob taiirhrg during his ownership, a good in come from the rentals. "r7-7! t"ITTT' The- purchase of these properties makes the Realty Associates one of the largest3 holders vt. Inside realty In , the city. This company Is now the owner of the Columbia building at the north east corner of West Park and Washing ton, the Packard garage at Twenty third and Washington, ' the two pieces purchased last week - the four story building 'at the soutbwest-corner f Grand avenue and East Morrison, a similar structure at Grand-avenue and East Stark streets,, and two residence pect Park. The value of these holdings Is estimated at $I.S0O,00O. Henry .J. Donnerberg has-purchased from I. A. Dlppel the residence prop erty described as lots 13 and 14 in block (, 'Irving' addition, and located on Broadway between East Seventeenth and East Eighteenth. The consideration Involved was 19600' . '. - a house, and lot described as lot IS, block J5, in -Alamedst-'Parkrr Ths con sideration was $4500. j r ' r tTt T.-Richards iias taken title from M. Rasmussen to a house and - lotfc. cated on Larch street near East Harri son street, in Ladd's addition. The con- ! slderatlbn was $4500. ' .-.. -TheChapln-Herlow Mortgage at Trust Co. has purchased frm Sterling, Foster chin' were volcanlo eruptTons . of .Mount Twafmal. ' Kodlak Island," Alaska. , ; - - Aviator Planges Into Sen. ' Boulogne, France, Aug. 10. Starting ; On a flight across the English channel from here today, Aviator Beaumont lost control of his machine when 100. yards off shore. andthavhydroplBne plungeJ Into the water, Beaumont and the ma- botl. saved. Wldner & Chambers' store and apartment building, under construction at Union avenue and East Couch. GOLF PARK Hi EWD1 l3la.wlU tit once divide the tracts Into Zlv or more acres and put It on the -market The grester portion of the tract Is farm land, although there. .is -some elevated ground that will -make Tesldence sites, as it overlooks the city and upper end of the valley. Surveys Jtor an mterurhnn csrllne have been ynade through this tract Melvln Hansen has purchased from Jonathan Johnson 1000 acres of la nil w ana a Half miiew JTtf'frTgTT"'''Jr', moisture : 8. F. Wilson of Pendleton has trans ferred to Blake McFall 127 acres in election 4 township 4 north, range -!, located In Umatilla county, it was evi dently a property exchange, as Mr. 'Wilson recently purchased a larjre mount of property from the Tortland 3pr concern. .1 Frank Sloan et al, for a consideration tiamed as $1200, has sold to Oeorg W. I Lambrlth 80 acres In section 2. town- (hlp 1 north, range 20. This Is land m tlhe Echo neighborhood. , . . .'. Paraffin and linseed oil. boiled lo- j kether, will brighten linoleum on which lit Is rubbed with a soft cloth. tent of the atmosphere, or ..degree of water saturation, are'belng studied lndo pendently. . Interesting Besults. Some Interesting results are also be ing obtained by subjecting to high-pres sure steam' pieces of mortar and concrete from sound and disintegrated structures. uwhlch have been in place for several 'jyeara. To determine the value of the high pressure steam test as a determination of -the soundness and structural quality of Portland cements, a large number of concrete cylinders, II Inches In dlam eter by It Inches In length, are being made of coment which falls to meet the normal 212 degrees Fahrenheit test, as well as of cement which pasfirw this test but falls to meet the proposed 20 atmosphere steam-pressure test, ani of cement which meets both of the abovt requirements. The cements are being tented In a nnrrhal 1:2:4 proportion con crete mixture and will be exposed In various localities over a period of years and tested for clastic properties and compressive strength. Saving and Investing for the Thrifty J f Uy John M. Osklion. ? First of all, Mrs. Jones keeps strict . account of her receipts and expendl- t'JreS She has a small Income of her I Own, and a regular, liberal allowance ; from ber husband. 8 ho hax passed the time when It wss "too much bother" to remember how she spent the money she jot; slso, you nevrr hear her say now that .'I seems I tan never make ends meet" The reform grew our nf- ta)t With Jones, who pointed out that with out some sort .of system she could never hop to balance .her accounts. Also, , Jones pointed out that no business et-uld'long remain solvent without sho Jne a surplus. Running a, home, Mrs. Jone decided, ts a business. Essentials must be pro Tided for first, then non-ersentlals. Or luxuries. So shei began to keep two " account. To her surprise a remark ably small Mlt of her receipts seemed 4.0 go for essentials about one dollar ut of three. She began to analyse "Yiif-hMHUX account, and 'found that she fould easllyTut off various Items, -ArTM-tna"-t)r a "rnr w 'wttTcrrtiit family lived well and "kept up Its post tlon," Mrs. Jones found that she had to her credit over $G00. She could cer tainly do as well next year, so she turned over the $500 to Jones to In vest. Jones bought a fnrm mortgage paying 6 per cent and gave It to hie wife. Next year, with the $600 which Mrs. Jones saved, and $400 borrowed from the bank at S per cent, he bought a $10iFO mortgage.. .Th third year trie debt at the bank wss discharged and two $100 bonds added. Next year will be the. fourth of Mrs Jones' experiment. There will be an extra hundred dollars, due as interest on her investments, to add to the fund or to extend the list of luxuries. It won't matter very much then where it goes. What is Important Is that Mrs Jones, as head of the housekeeping business, has become solvent. The dis covery that she Is solvent has cheered her, as It does any one who ts Inter ested In the Job of maintaining pros perity. Mrs. Jones has no copyrlKht on hr fTa6rjyw61nan "fn$y Us it i BEN SWT Harden Is finishing up a neat bungalow J effected on it and when It is done, Mr. Rankin will move Into it. The qonslderatlon Is not given out, but It Is the neighbor hood of $3000. Homesites to Be.. Opened - for Sale on,New 40 Acre Tract About Sept. 5. Another high class residence section is to be opened rlext month. This time it la a plsce of property that has prob ably been the most commented upon, from the standpoint of residential de sirability, of any section of the pity. The tract is a 40 acre piece, known as CJolf Park, adjoining the north hnlf of the links on tne east sine, nearly sou electric trains pass the property every day and the splendid way in which this part of the golf links has been kept up DM.jrAM4.JQ0nXLJL.tt5 to when it would bo opened for sale. Thfc Waverly Golf club is about la be gin construction of a $100,000 clubhouse and not having further uo for this 40 acre part of the old links, after opening the new piece to the south, it was ue elded to sell this tract for home alts and use the money to build the new club. A syndicate of club membra purchased I the land, consisting of HV I Corbett, fthsTUwTHlstafe," the'FaTIInFTsTatertrie MacieaTwate.' Rodney U tiiistin, J. C Alns worth Captain Gordon . Voorhlea, WwHer F. Burrell, Drake C. O'Reilly, F W. Ltadbetter and E. C. Shevelln. The Idea of retaining ownership in the club membership was to control as lorig as possible, the character of Im provements and buildings to be erected on property that will always adjoin the club grounds. F. N Clark will be the selling agent and announces that the Improvements will all be completed by September b, after which time the sites wll be1 open for fcal. There are enly 68 home sites In the 40 acres. Each one Is about 100x200, aver aging four city lots in six. A build ing restriction of $5000 insures a de sirable class of homes. The really dif ferent feature of the property ts In the manner of Its platting. Jha streets are all built on the basis of curves. Then; Is not a straight line or an angle in the entire piece. Then again, every home Is designed to face the inside, ad ding to one feature that la particularly sought, cxclusivenesK, Standsrd city Improvements have been ordered and are now being Installed. Eyen the alleys have hard surface pavements. No poles In the streets. They will all be completed by Septem ber 5. The street car service to Golf Park Is one of unusual character. Nearly 300 trains a day, either by the Hull wood, Oregon City or Kstacada lines, reach the property and as many return. There Is w average, all day lonj, of a car every four minutes each woy. During the busier hours, this la Increased to a car every two minrutes. 4 value each parcel at about $275,000. Joseph- M. Healy, the seller, bought the Morrison street parcel about three years ago for $150,000 and a little later took over the V. M. C. A. building High Cost ol Living al When winter comes, Parkrose housekeepers won'j; hive to worry over what to have for dinner. And they .won't have to resort to high priced canned goods either, Right now their gar dens are overflowing with good things tp eat beans, peas, greens, beets, onions all kinds of vegetables. Fruit is plenti ful and preserves, jellies and-ja'msare being made daily. When winter comes, the family will enjoy an abundance of fresh fruit and vegetables, so much better than canned or storcgoods. "And don't forget that instead of paying 20 and 25 cents for a tin can of store goods, they are enjoying more iiealtMul homer produtts costing just a mere fraction. It cuts the cost of liv ing squarely in two. It's one, just one of the advantages of living in Parkrose on a broad acre all your own. There's room for you at Parkrose and a chance for you to get ahead. Investigate today. Come and see rts at once. Of course, the terms are made to suit ydu. Slauson-Craig Company 304 OAK STREET, OPP. COMMERCIAL CLUB BLDG. ONE FUNERAL FOR SLAYER AND HIS TWO VICTIMS (t'nltrd 1'mi L'iwl TVlr t Weavervllle, Cel.. Aug. 10. With three hearses carrying the caskets, nd near ly the whole town in attendance at the funeral, the burial of Katie and Elba Oould, und George Lorenz, their slayer, took place here today. The two sisters were-Jnterred in the same nrayalii there was no distinc tion In the sorrow exprcNned for the clrls and that for their insane murderer. The Jock Rodman nompnny has sold the I). I,. Harden place of 10 Hires nt Wft-iTirm-T6-. W. Raiitrn. M"r7 1i 4 y ! c HI hf Is It Any-Wonder WHY the Harriman system spent nearly $3,000,000 in build ing from Portland to Tillamook Bay? WHY the United Railways bought extensive terminals and water frontage at Say City? WHY other transcontinental lines are seeking franchises at Bay City? WHY the Whitney Lumber Company, the largest in the Pacific northwest, is building a $1,000,000 sawmill plant just outside the corporate limits of Bay City? WHY whole blocks of, lots are selling at Bay City to invest ment seekers who are flocking there? LOTS $65 TO $1500 Easy Payments TIMBER DEEP CHANNEL n5r Railroads PANAMA CAtfAL DAIRYING in i r -fa FISHERIES n Bay City Land Co.; Send ne booklet abotit Bay City. Name Address 000 A Payroll of 3,000, YEARLY FOR ONE HUNDRED YEARS for wages alone to reduce the logs to lumber will not exhaust the THIRTY FIVE BILLION feet of' timber tributary to Tillamook Bay. IS IT ANY WONDER why Congress voted the appropriation for a jetty at the entrance of Tillamook Bay, and for a deep channel to., BAY CITY the only possible large townsite on Tillamook Bay, where, according to the government en gineers, the big sawmills must be established? Now Is the Time The secret of successful in vestment is to know where peo ple want to go, and to get there Lrst. Any observant investor with only one eye can see OPPOR TUNITY stalking up promi nently at Bay City. Millions of dollars will be in vested in sawmills and other woodworking plants . at Bay City. Real estate values will advance rapidly at Bay City. The time to buy at Bay City is before th activity begins. Investors who wait for devel opments will have to pay dou ble present prices. Bay Gity Land Co. 70i-2-3 Spalding BIdg. SOLID FOUNDATION FOR OREGON'S COMING SECOND METROPOLIS JU8I.KIT , - - - r, "'. v?--