INDUSTRIAL
STATE NEWS
Springfield tax levy reduced
5.4 mills.
Eugene improvements for 1914
total $750,000.
Baker spent $200,000 on new
buildings in 1914.
Lane county is promoting the
sugar beet industry.
The Cottage Grove tax levy is
12 mills less than 1914.
Baker county mining output
for 1914 was $1.500,000.
Irving farmers are boosting
the sugar beet industry.
A. C. Ruby, Portland stock
man, builds $25,000 residence.
Prosperity is in the air but it
has not got down to the earth.
Tax reduction in Polk county
amounts to $110,901 below 1914.
W. B. Glafke establishes a
branch wholesale house at Al
bany.
Drs. Sanders and Eastland will
build a general hospital at Rich
land.
Eugene Socialists are initiat
ing a bill for a large municipal
market.
Ed Stocker will remove a saw
mill plant from Philomath to near
Newport.
Guy Lafollett is the new owner
o f the Crook County Journal
at Prineville.
Three new bridges on the Col
umbia highway to Astoria will
cost $40,000.
The Southern
Pacific shops
have re-opened at three places em
ploying 1200 men.
Crown-Willamette paper mills
have made places for 33 more
men at Oregon City.
Central Oregon Irrigationists
will ask the state to appropriate
$1,350,000 for projects.
The local brick manufacturers
at Eugene won out on the armory
contract over convict made brick.
Oregon canneries report a good
market for their products, but
will ask relief from restrictive
legislation.
Plans are complete for the
$100,000 hotel to be erected by
Mayor Simpsom and associates
at North Bend.
One o f the plausible things to
come before the legislature is a
state institution for the care of
crippled children.
The Oregon Blue Sky Law,
one o f the clubs to keep capital
out o f Oregon, has been upheld
by the Supreme court.
The program o f the Multno
mah delegation to cut off a mil
lion dollars o f fixed charges will
reduce state taxes one mill.
The resources o f Oregon and
Agricultural education are to be
advanced by an O. A. C. college
quartet going east to give con
certs.
The attempt to collect nearly
$50 liability insurance from a
man erecting a $1,000 house at
Portland shows what a state sys
tem costs.
It is estimated the One-board
plan o f business administration
in place o f six commissions for
higher education institutions in
Oregon would save half a million.
The Southern Pacific has an
nounced the rates which will ap
ply to tourist travel between
Portland and San Francisco dur
ing the period o f the great expo
sition, tickets to be on sale daily
t>etween February 15 and No
vember 30. On 90-day limit
tickets the rate will be $35; on
30-day tickets, $30: on special
occasions, such as important con
ventions, etc. a round trip rate
will be made o f $25.75 with a
15-day limit and stop-over privi
lege on the return trip. To the
exposition at San Diego, the
road will make a round-trip rate
o f $52.25 with a limit o f 40 days
and stop-over privileges both
ways.
A lea d er ad gets the business.
GERMAN OFFICERS IN BELGIUM.
PROFESSIONAL
CARDS
i l . W . ï j U I K , M . D.
P lt y s i c i q n q n d S t-iP g e o n
Office in McFarland
Building, Upstair*.
Office Phone 34.
Residence Phone 1-tiJ
R. M. McCARGAR, D. D. S.
DENTIST
Successor to Dr. F. L. Ingram
Office Phone 5
Residence on Pacific Highway
DR. A. J. HENDRY
DENTIST
O f f i c e , Over First National Bank
J . S. ^{etìlcy
P h oto by A m erican P ress A ssociation .
I d the center (the short nniD In front) Is General von Em mich, the captor o f Líese, and at his left la the Duke
of B runsw ick who Inis been rep o rted miss Ins.
LEADING HOLIDAYS
UNITED STATES AID
RAILROAD SHOPS
FALL ON SUNDAY
SAVES DELGIANS
RESUME OPERATIONS
Two important holidays this
year, Memorial Day and the
Fourth o f July, fall on Sunday,
and Christmas, falls on Saturday,'
says the new 1915 calendar.
Ground hog day, always watched
for by weather prophets falls on
Tuesday this year and Lincoln’s
brirthday, February 12, is .on
Friday, the only legal holiday o f
the month, Washington’s birth
day, falls on Monday.
St. Patrick’s day, the big holi
day o f the year for the wearers
o f the green is on Wednesday
this year. This month is further
notable for having a full moon
twice, the first on March 1 and
the second on March 31. Easter
is the big holiday and this falls
on Sunday, April 4. June, the
months o f weddings, sees no hol
idays o f importance, this ar
rangement undoutedly b e i n g
made to allow as many days as
possible for weddings.
PRESIDENT WILSON MAY
MAKE VISIT IN OREGON
Washington, Jan. 7.—Presi
dent Wilson expects his trip to
the Panama canal, the San Diego
and San Francisco expositions,
and his speaking tour afterwards
to last from March 5 to May 1.
He told callers today he planned
to be away from Washington forj
that period unless public busi
ness necessitates his presence
here.
An invitation to include the Pa
cific northwest in the itinerary
was extended to the president
today by Senators Chamberlain
and Lane o f Oregon ; Borah and
Brady o f Idaho; Sutherland of
Utah, and Jones and Poindexter
o f Washington. He promised to
take in those states if possible.
Brussels, Jan.
9.— ‘ ‘ If the
United States had not come to
our aid, it would have meant
starvation for most o f u s ," said
Alfred Nerinex, provisional bur
gomaster o f Louvain, to the As
sociated Press today. "W e are
willing to work, but we cannot
when the doors are closed to ex
ports. W e cannot buy food,
even if we have the money, when
the doors are closed to imports.
It is no fault o f ours if we starve.
Feed us now and we will pay you
back in industry when the war
is over.
"W e are paying back now in
gratitude for the lives America
has saved gratitude which will
endure as proof that human af
fections is stronger than any trea
ty alliance.
Bread Riots Are Feared.
"H ere in the midst o f the ruins
o f my town I do not lose heart.
I know we shall rebuild it all, if
only we can have food to keep
us alive. The most powerful
army in the world cannot Teuto-
nize Belgium, but America, arm
ed with bread, is Americanizing
Belgium. My worst fear is that
there will be bread riots if the
relief stops."
M. Nerinez said the population
o f Louvain was only 3000 less
than before the German occupa
tion. The people whose homes
had been burned are living with
their
neighbors. The burgo
master said he was giving work
to the idle by having them clean
the streets and repair houses
which can be made habitable.
Grants Pass is pushing for
three new industries in 1915 a
beet sugar factory, a custom mill
to crush ore, and a plant to pre
pare lime rock for fertilizer.
Seventy men with families
have been set to work digging
sewer ditches in North Salem.
Albany, Or., Jan. 9.—After
being shut down for almost a
month, the Corvallis & Eastern
Railroad shops in this city reop
ened this week with practically a
full crew. About 60 men are be
ing employed now.
ATTORNEY A T LAW
Special Attention Given to Mining and
Corporation Law.
Office. Woodward Building.
Practices in all Courts
Woodward Buildin
J . C. J O ljJ ^ S O ^
ATTORNEY AT LAW
N O T A R Y PUBLIC
Pho
No. 3
Cottage Grove, Ora
COTTAGE GROVE
Hospital S Sanatarium
THE MIDDLE WEST
GETS LUMBER ORDER
Kansas City, Mo., Jan. 7.—A
lumber company here today sign
ed contracts to furnish 50,000,000
feet o f timber to be shipped to
England. The lumber will con
sist chiefly o f ties and mine tim
bers. The timber, it was said,
will be shipped to Port Arthur,
Texas, for transportation to Eng
land.
lig h t H er* at Y ou r Horn*
¡g
Surgical Caaes Especial Attention
X-RAY
LABARATORY
For Further Particulars Address
Dr. H. C. Schleef
$700 Used As Football
Springfield, Or., Jan. 7.—A
package done up in soiled cloth
and Ewund with two garters and
a shoestring kicked aE)out the
street in front o f the City Hall
for half a day and then lay for
two days among waste papers on
the recorder’ s desk until it was
claimed yesterday by Jules Ro
seau.
Opening the package, he dis
played $230 in currency and cer
tificates o f deposit for $480 more
and handed the finder $25.
Notice of Road Meeting.
Notice is hereby given to the
voters o f Mosby Creek road dis
trict that there will be a meeting
held at Ishmael’s place Saturday,
January 16, 1915, at 1:30 o ’ clock
p. m. for the purpose o f electing
a road supervisor for said road
district.
H. B. Y ancey .
J. F. S pray .
JK j c f c O rr jhCis
A Poorly Fed Horse
reflects discredit on its owner, but the
owner gets the worst o f the deal lie-
cause economy in feeding the horse
affects its working capacity as well as
its appearance. If \our lior-es kicks on
his feed you can correct it by buying
your feed here, as you get the best
quality for the least outlay. Farmers,
contractors and horse owners generally
know that our Feed is always up to the
standard.
Sterling Feed Co.
PURCHASE OF MEXICO
FROM GENERAL VILLA! SassMmaaamaammmmgMBmsMsaammmimmtmMmmmmmg
l No War Prices Here
Lancing, Mich., Jan. 8.—Sen
ator John Damon, o f Mount
Pleasant, introduced a concurrent
resolution in the state senate
this afternoon, calling upon con
gress to take immmediate steps
to purchase Mexico. It was Da-1
mon’s contention that the U nit-!
ed States must eventually own j
all o f the country to the south as
far as the Panama canal. He i
said congress should be requested
to take immediate steps to ‘ ‘ac
quire the country from General 1
V illa." The resolution was re-1
ferred to committee on federal j
relations.
\
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The annual automobile show
will be held in Portland Jan. 23!
l to 30 inclusive,
1
Although the Packing Houses have
increased their prices, and there has
been a general rise in prices all along
the line, we have not raised the prices
to our customers.
You can buy meat
here just as cheap as before the talk of
War Prices began.
Remember that.
Dressed Chicken Every Saturday
Correct Method of
Horseshoeing
W agon Making
A nd
General Repair W ork
South of First National Bank
Sixth Street
Spriggs Br o s .
or at any time on order
BLACKSM ITH
CULVER BROTHERS
PEOPLES
MEAT
MARKET
Pure Hom em ade Lard Oar Specalty
The place to get your
horses shod and good
Repair Work.
Joe Baker