0' , t Continuing tli Sprlngflold Nowo and Lano County StarV Which Woro Consolidated. Fobruary 10, 1914. ' '''4 CbVNtf LANE NEWS I rih BiHB MPff? fltttiwit f8l'ftwrl,l'JM,Hortiic(lI J .JroKoii, pUm mmtur iniilBr nclfir Congro oM mIi, Ml REAL ESTATE IS MOVING-TRADES Ai SALES IDE Evan Mnstorson of Springfield Inst week purchased tho .1. C. Trottor ranch of 27 acres on tho McKonzlo near Waltorvllle, mav lng tho deal through Goro & Uowo. Tho snino linn reports also trading Mrs. Conrad'n prop erty on Fifth street for an 80 ucro ranch near Yoncalia. Tho stock Is Included with tho ranch, and Mrs. Conrad will go at onco to take charge They have a third deal practically comploted, hut tho papers have not passed. Kugono realty firms report felling to Mrs. Octavla Wheeler of Springfield an aero of ground In tho suhurhs of Kugono for an Investment. A. L. Churchill, formerly in husiucss In Springfield, has trad ed his 302-acro ranch on Camp Creek for a '12-acre farm near Santa Cruz, California. Tho considerations are given at $10, 000.. Tho Oeorgo 13lrtwlstlo farm of 100 acres near Mabel has been traded to Hurt Hupp of Robc-t bzorry, Idaho, at $7000. Jesse liaston of Waltervlllo has traded his farm, tho Stor mcnt place, to Mrs'. Mabel ID. Taylor of Eugene. ' CAMP CREEK PERSONALS (Special to (ho Lnno County Nowm) Camp Creek, Oro. Lawronco Cossler who has been working at Thurston Is homo now. Mr. and Mrs. Will Sears visit ed with friends on Camp Creek this week. Mrs. A. M. Brown and Miss Mabel DurycoVero Waltervlllo visitors Thursday. Will Ruth of Thurston is hero visiting at Edd Nyes. Supervisor J. K. Platts has been working' tho roads this week. Miss Lizzie Kennedy Is hero visiting witll her sister Mrs. L. Stephens. Mr. ' and Mrs.sFrcd Brown spent Sunday With Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Jack. ' Mr. David and Guyv Stephens were Eugene visitors Thursday. Dale Chase and Miss Mamlo Polllo were visitors at Mrs. J. J. Chase homo this wcqk. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Jack and family spent Sunday with Mrs. J. Commins. Charllo Miller visited with friends at Thurston Sunday. A crowd of young folks from here nttended church at Walter vlllo Sunday evening. S, v COMPANY SELLS SAWMILLS ON MOHAWK W. J. Zimmorman Purchasor of Three Big Plants Tho three sawmills owned by tho Southern Pacific company In the tlmllor bordering the Mo hawk valloy near MarcOla, havo been -purchased by W. J. Zim merman, of tho Zlmmernuui-Wells-Urown company, of. Port land. Mr. Zimmerman has also purchased all tho logging ma chnery and docks at tho three mills. Thcso mills woro -erected about eight years ago when 11. Koehlor was purchasing agont of tho railroad company. Tho purpose of tho plants was to saw all the lumper needed by the company On' lis lln.cs'.lh Ore gon. Tho Umber waVjakon from tho company's lands bor dering thy MoiuvSvk valley, Tho mills operated only a little over iemnl. 1 ono year, tho company evidently' concluding that It would -bo cheaper to buy Its lumber from companies than to manufacture it. Since then tjio mills have been Idle. All three of them are equipped with good machinery and each had a capacity oNJe tweou 70,000 and 80,000 feet' a day. 4 1IU luimtnr miKliifnA 1 wnn' .. .... ,.. ...... booming while those, mlllsvoro in operation, ucsiues uiosoiuircu plants, tho big mills ofttie Booth-Kelly Ltynber conn,mriyit .ill .1 if ,ii .I.t-.'ti'T. .u.mb, u..u u . fry -M" mills up and uown t wpiiawK wemiimg, ami m or jyajnu part the benefit of tho immense pay roll. Register. COMPLETE COBURG LOG . ,T T?. W '? appeared. E. E. Morrison will display, and a shipment will bc.,a,neu- XVV:T "IT", nin against Chas. L. Scott, tlie!,atle tonight. Messrs. Gore ft! Judge ...i.. . I. i..., ,i...Ji.i.l.ii ... -i"zons- canuiuaio lor mayor, itowc already had some line spe- iat 'and uie ea d thoffir aL hU PcM ow a councilman, ;cin ens, especially of com, and Navr York , lUld iMlfcOlie aild tllO Otnei. tOWnS ... k rft-nlnr-Mnn. ntmnRlnir 1.lr will a..nn1 tuBn mttu R AdaniH. iof this I HAULING JOB THIS WEEKof tho, Citizens ticket, Is unop-l ; posed. Mrs. Hannah umf tno 11-; By Wednesday of tlilB wcekibrarian, and Miss Lillian Gorrle, the last of tho logs In tho Booth- Kelly pond at Coburg will havo been hauled to Springfield audi tlyj work of sevreal months will text of ordinance No. 410, llcen havo been completed. Tho sup- slug and taxing motor-bus lines, ply from Landaxc will coulinucnnd referred to the people, were to come, und by the 'end of n, 'printed last .Friday and distri- J month logs will havo to be ;ped m rrom wendung again,, nsluy law. The ordinance and the tho Landax shlplnonts, ,ar.o. not sufilcicnl to keep the. mill. busy. Rev. Win. Ferris is Baptist Pastor " At Iho nYorhlng'servlcq aTtho Baptist church yesterday, Rev. W. N. Ferris accepted tho call whicli the church extended two wcoks ago. Ills wife, Dr. Fer - rls, also expressed her con vie-h Hon that it was tho Lord's will and tho Lord's work which quired them hero. Rev. Frank 1 Day, a former pastor, was pros- j out and spoke very earnestly, to ""Ln jiua.ji mm nu lum ol his. father being ono of tho; This year there Is assessed on organizers of - the church 40! tho .rolls 41.22 miles of these years ago and of being deacon. J railroads, with ax valuation of Ho spoko also of his own conver- $69,8(iG, while last year the-e slon and of his first pastorate :was a mileage of 82,84 with a .being in litis church. He spoke,! 'also of several preachers having I already gone from it and of qth-assessment roll Is as follows: ers making preparation to enter j Acres of all laiuls (O. &. C. R. tho ministry. The prospects foriR. lands 298,715 acres, value$3,r good permanent evangelistic S20.915) 1,515,718; value $19, work ln tho church were ijovor, 277,015; value per unit, $12.71. brighter than at present. At the evening service Mips Harriot P. Cooper, general mis sionary of the Woman! Ameri can Baptist Homo Missionary society, occupied the pulpit and told of the work in great cities, ln the mountains, the forests, tho prniries and the deserts. She gavo personal Incidents of tho settlement workers among tho Jews, Russians, Japanese,.. ucr grocs and Indians and mountain whites. She told of ono young lady In Michigan, baptized by Rev. W. N. Forris, who is now in chnrgo of a great settlement work. Mention was also mado of a young Jew who was driven from homo because ho had om brced Christianity, who cano under tho'lnlluonco o Rev, Fer ris in Tennessee, afterward go ing to Crozler Theological sem inary, and is now In .charge of Homo mission work iq. .Califor nia and one of tho most brilliant speakers of that great 'state. J. II. Nowmap Is developing sales territory for SliislaW sal mon out of Eugene,-1 i Florence oxpcotq,, to , ha.yo a I fruit cannery, next yeJUV; Only 19 miles of rriUs.remahi to bgflald before Cool Bay 'Is1 'connected with the main 'line' of the S. P. SPRINGFIELD, LANE COUNTYi OREGON, MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, -J El I FINAL LIST OF Nominating petitions ror cumll(ntCB for ofllc0 ln tho Nominating petitions for eight com ing city election were filed with tho recorder late Friday after noon, to bo in before tho rc- qu,red tcn day8 boforo the clcc - ,rhr0 jn(le,)cnUcnt candidates tho candidates of the 1 ticket, J. V. Coffin Donaldson. II. E.Walker, the i present recorder and candidate! treasurer, arc seeking election to this office. Official pahphlets giving thei NAMES CANDIDATE shlp-ibuted to tho voters as required arguments on It made an elght- page pamphlet. ASSESSED VALUATION $35,353,640 THIS YEAR The total assesed valuation of proporty in Lane county in 1915 .lc If!?? RJf nnnnnllnir in 41ml summary of the tax rolls 'looted by Assessor B. F. Keeney i This is $134,480 less than the total fast year, the total on the l014 rolls being $35,7SS,1 20. Assessor Keeney explains that 'a part of tho decrease is repre re-isontcd In tho assessment of that portion of the Willamette Pacific !iiOWover, having previously gone railway and a few logging rall-jg,. it in' all alltombbil6. roads which passed to the state! Thc inipreasjon img prevailed iiii.v v;iuiiiiooiuu uuim& .nvi '''''timt ftobert E. Strahorn was valuation of $305,375. The summary of this year's $38.18. Acres of tillable lands, 129, 510; value $4,94G,510;unlt valuo $38,185. f Acres of timber lands (O. & C. It. R. lands, 217,558 acres, value, $2,877,425.) GS0.703 acres; valuo, $9,610,000; .unit value, $14,117. Acres of non-itlllable lands (O. & C. R. R. lands, S1.045 acres, value, $443,490) 705,475 acres; value, 4,721,045, unit value, $0, G92. Improvements ou deeded or patented lands. $1,036,435. Town and city lots, $6,368,700. (Continued on Pago 3) Bever-Hrndon Hardware Company He TO E DISPLAY AT BIG LAND SHOW '.Through tho efforts of Gore & IIowq a dlflnlfiv of nrnrtuntB from BPRI NGFIELD thcYlcinllty of Springfield will lf IIne8 In Eastern Oregon be bomado at tho Manufacturers, ,causc of tho Strahorn project, and Land Products show at JudS Ivett said the Union" Pa- : Portland. A Bcctlon of shelf 'Spacc has been set aside for this Pprtland. A Bcctlon of shelf Citizens'! sugar beets, carrots, and other From Portland heroes to Se and J. T. ifami products. They have one'attfc, thence to San Francisco pumpkin which weighs 09 1-2 pounds, and It was picked green They would be glad to receive other specimens of farm pro - duels, and will have then sent to Portland and tagged with the (name of the grower. ? LOVETT SAYS STRAHORN LINE IN EASTERN OREGON IS NOT BACKED BY U.P. Chairman of Directors of Union Pacific Says Railroads in U .S. .Have Been Taught Economy by tho War. Emphatically asserting that lthcV proposed' Strahorn railway across Eastern Oregon was not backed by the Union Pacific, jJU(1e gvea, ch'alr- fl, nr fli,fni -lJRT . . .r . - - com-.jlimBef not unfrlendlv toward Mr gtrahorn's project. j jU(gc Lovett has not been in j central Oregon, on his present !annuai inspection trip, over the 5 lines or the Union Pacific and its subsidiary roads. He is well ac- qu; luted with tho territory, acting in some such capacity in Eastern Oregon as he did in Washington at the time of the construction of the North Coast road. Judge Lovett, however, draws a distinction. "When Mr. Strahorn was working in our interest at that time we were not ready to make an announcement and did notJ eay anything one way or the other as to his connection with us. In Eastern Oregon he is ronresentlncr other interests en tirely. Whose these are I do not resignation of President Farrell, know." said Judge Lovett at the of the O. W. R. & N. as "moon Hotel Portland. !shi,ie. 1 think" Mr, Strahorn's plan involves He said ho had heard nothing the construction of a 1U1UUUU r .1 i..i ,,11, P i ,..l.,l i-Ur r T TJ iV IU wuiui IJUUil uiu w. u.1,ulunlwbvu0 vPu.Wv. N. Co. is building from River side an extension of its branch lino from Vale. Another line Item's branch to South Bend on Zmmny was the forming a part of the group will Willapa harbor. Tho Milwaukee 3 ho comS t ,it.,it 1,00 ii viri,f tn co tho n imst speaicei, ami no compu existing Hill and Harriman ter minals at Bond, while still an other will closo tho gap between tho Southern Pacific at Klamath IF YOU SAW our carpenter's tools you would not accept any oth ers. . Finest quality tooled Eteel, edged to a porfct iln l1 h and the finest hand turned handles procurable. Everything Imaginable in hardware. Make no mis take, our guarantee pro-, tects you always. Prices a challenge to. tho other fel 1915 Falls and Bend. Under this plan of development trade from Kla-1 math Falls and Lakevlew now teolng to California because of tho railroad connections will be led toward Portland. The east ana west line win open a new (territory, and will give tho Port- jland business houses, in dis tance to haul, an advantage over (the jobcrs In Salt Lake City. As to any possible paralelllng ,cllic reserved the right to build ,C1UC reserved the right to iniiK wl,ere business was to be ob Lovett reached Port- evening, coming from in company with E. consulting engineer. ad will go east by way of I.Ogdcn. "Railroad conditions in the! - East are Improving, duo partly - to the large crops and the war orders. The depression has taught the railroads ecomomy. Some roads are a little under the. standard for maintenance now, but the Union Pacific has kept its equipment toi a high figure throughout. For this rea- son we are not afraid of any car shortage. In fact, I notice the bulk of the wheat here in Oregon and Washington has not yet begun to move to any great extent." In answer to a mipstinn as to ocetMn mnmin., f tv,a n W.'R. & N. Co. into the Union Pacific for opemting purposes Judge-L'oveft'tIeclafed iris the company's purpose to leave lo cal administrative matters to its men oji the ground. He em phazed however, the direct re lation of the coast company to the Union Pacific system as a whole. He told why a part of the ticket auditing formerly done in Portland is now done in Omaha. "A ticket from Chicago to Portland formerly had three coupons, one for the Union Pas clfic, one for the Oregon Short Line and one for the Q. W. It. & N. So while only one interest was involved returns had to be made to the foreign roads from Omaha, from Salt Lake and from Portland. It was an arch aic system of auditing, and should have been discontinued years ago.". The head of the Union Pacific characterized the rumors of the vLe n i-t ii. j i 1. ul lixi. ruii;iia numifa tjiti t i tcnn TTr nlcn 1 Icnlo lltl oil nMV ! !lrimiOrrlrrn nc tn flln nlnnc nt flin company in securing a joint user privilege on tho Milwaukee sys- 0 bor, and a reciprocal right oni , , t , r,oTi,o Jt . ,T,n, ii i. i .which Is rated as one of the most W1U IIUW VJ11U1W lino una ucuu discussed locally. Finds 'Sorgum to Be Profitable Homer Taylor, wbo has a farm between Coburg and Har rlsburg, planted two acres of sorghum this year, and 1b now crushing the cano and boiling down tho syrup. Ho planted it in tracts for different treatment and finds that lio Is getting from GO to 90 gallons of syrup from an aero of the cano, and is selling tho syrup at ?1 a gallon. Nate VOL. XIV. no. m BUSINESS ill PROPOSE LAND DISPOSAL PLAN That the Southern Pacific Is paying taxes In Oregon at tho rate of $2000 a day, and'thnt Its total operating cost In Oregon ia ( $8100 a day, was one of , 'tho Startling statements made at the, banquet of the Business Men's club Friday evening by Judgd Wm. Colvig, tax and right o way agent of the Southern Pa cific company, who was the prin clpal speaker. That the Souhtern Pacific company pays almost 15 percent , of the taxes of Lane county was anotJier interesting statement,of Mr. .Colvig's. His topic, however, was uie p. ac u. iana grant, ana he covered the subject thorough- ly, giving statistics as to the amounts of land involved, the taxes paid and the services ren- dercd by the railroad in the carrying of war supplies, His addressed brought up a general discussion of the whole subject, and more particularly of the question of getting the lands developed. After the question had been discussed from many angles, the. following resolutions :were offered and unanimously passed: ! Resolved that it Is the sense ot this raeetinf- that, our legBtioa .in con- to,r 8lich actfo cowi&k.Ut Kress uu uim uiu. uoicui iuaii.uvi.cu will require the Oregon and Califor nia Railroad Coinyany, to immediately, and within six months after the date of such enactment by Congress, .to open a General Land Office in 4the City of Portland, Oregon, for the dls. position of its Grant Lands within this State and which office shall be re quired to receive and file all applica tions from actual settlers for any por tion the said Grant Lands and to Bell the same to such applicants, ac cording to the terms of tho original Land Grant, viz: at a price not to ex ceed $2.50 per acre and in quantities not grcatei than 1C0 acres at land to any such actual settler and shall main tain said Land Office and receive such applications for full period of six years from the date of such enactment, and that after the expiration of said term of six years, all Uie rest, remainder and residue of said Grant Lands shall : be vested -in and become the absblute- ,r the - u 1U 1U co- 'm Provided, however, that the O. & C. IU It Co. shall continue to maintain the said Land Office herelntofore pro vided, Tecelvo applications for the purchase of the unsold lands of -said Grant and sell In quantities, not ex ceeding one section of land to each applicant and at a price per acre riot greater than the average assossed val uation placed thereon by the respec tive Counties in said State, ln which such lands so sold are situated. (Congress should define what con stitutes an actual settler.) Fifty members of the Business Men's club, and their guests, dt- IVIIUCU I.11VJ utwiviuvb, hum , in the old Reapers hall. M. M. Peery was the tosatmaster, fill to- Mm nfUno rnnpfill1v. Norman vice-president ttIUa Norman vl.p.r.e"- 4 rvAnninl nv rt rrnx Af r lift f IT A efficient In the state. Charles Roblson, deputy pro secuting attorney of Multnomah county, spoke in tho interest of the Lane Products show, and in cidentally read a strong sermon on tho necessity for community harmony ir best results are to bo obtained. E, J. Frasler of Eugene also spoko briefly, Rowe brought hi a-sample of the syrup, which is being sampled and found excellent by thoso easternorswiio.arQfamlllar.wlth the sorghum of the east.' W,-C. Myers also planted sorghupi this year and finds it does,well It