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About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1913)
OKEOON CITY KNTEUPK1SK KK'fDAV, OCTOHKU 3, 1913. OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE Publiihcd Every Friday. E. E. BRODlE, Editor and Publiahtr. Entered at Oregon City. Oregon. l'oatolYtco an second claim matter. 8ubicriptlon Rate: One year '!!? 8lx Month ' Trial Subscription. Two Month Subscriber will And the dute of expiration stumped on their paper fol lowing their name. If last payment i not credited, kindly notify h. and the matter will receive our attention. Advertising Katea on application. FEEDING THE .Owirtji to the drought of the present season in a larpe WORLD'S MILLIONS ym of the I'liitcJ States', especially that portion oVpciuIal upon for production of cereal crops, there have Icen more than the usual number of pessimistic prophecies of calamity impending to the human i ace from shortage of food. Pessimists of this sort are wont to say that we have about reached the limit of pain cultivation, and that the population is increasing so rapidly that the problem of feeding it will be acute in a few gen erations. It is acute already, so far as the hih cost of living is concerned, hut that is not because of having reached the limit of the world's productive ness. The usual answer to this prophecy of impending starvation is that sci ence will find a way. It is predicted that science will in time take the life giving elements from earth and air and transmute them into food direct, without putting them through the chemistry of grain growing, beef raising, cjg producng and milk secreting. Wonderful achievements of science in finding substitutes for ehausted natural resources are pointed to as proof of the reasonableness of this expectation. Statistics do not show any need to place our reliance for food for the enhanced millions of the earth in future centuries upon any necromancy of science. From a productive standpoint it can be said that we have but bepin to scratch the earth's surface in the matter of fixid production. There are approximately 2,000,000,000 acres of land under cultivation, of the 30,000, 000,000 of the total land area of the earth. Making due allowance for un cultivable deserts and mountains there are at least 15,000.000,000 of acres of cultivable land still unproductive or five times as much as is now producing. This alone would seem to be sufficient for five times our present population, a state of things not likely to be reached for many centuries. Here, in the United States it is an admitted fact that on the average we are not getting from our cultivation more than one-third the food value we should per acre. This is less true in some parts of Europe, but more true in Asia, Africa and South America, so much that so that it might be safe to say that, taken as a whole, the 2,000,000,000 acres now under cultivation are producing but a quarter of what they might, and at some future time will produce. This fact would permit another multiplication of the world's population by four before -tarvatio:i became acute. Clearly scientific discovery is not to be our last resort for a long time to come, though our ever-present help in the matter of better agriculture and economy of use of what we produce. Our first problem in the matter of in creasing the food supply is to get better farming done right here in this country and in this state. - Development of unused areas will come gradual ly as civilization advances, but we shall have to stir ourselves fo rour own im provement. Oregon, for example, could send to market twice as much food products as she now does, with no addition but better methods to her equip ment. That is the practical problem of the food supply as it affects the pres ent generation. THE DOLLAR The other day Max Blanch, owner of the Triangle AGAINST LIFE Shirtwaist factory in which more than 100 'girls lost their lives during a recent fire, has been again convicted in the courts of New York for locking his doors and fire escapes and shutting off egTess in case of panics or fires. Some drastic measures ought to be taken with men of the Blanch calibre. They have no regard for human life, are absolutely callous to the sufferings of others. It would seem that a man who had been directly responsible for the death of that many girls, trapped to their death in the barn in which they worked, would have at least some hesitation about taking steps that would lead to a repitition of that performance. But Blanch seems to have no idea of anything but money. He iares noth ing for human life. He places the dollar on a higher plane that the suffer ings of the girls who were burned like rats in a trap in that shed where his shirtwaists were made. He even goes so far as to repeat the thing that lead to the trapping of those girls; that cost their lives, and robbed their fam ilies of their aid and comfort at times when such aid and comfort wen; needed. Absorbed by the greed for the almighty dollar, he has brushed aside every idea of anythng that raises him above the level of other beasts. Nothing too strong may be said or done with a man of his calibre. He is directly and alone responsible for the death of those girls. He alone may be held accountable for their murder. Had their egress from that burning building not been cut off, had it been of anything like fire-proof material, those girls would not have met death in that fire trap and shocked a world with the horror of their death. If the laws of this country were more stringent with men of that make up, if thev punished a man who was responsible for the shutting off of a fire escape as they purmh other criminals and sentenced them to a term of years it; the penitentiary of the state instead of merely allowing them to pay a fine, s. wholesome respect for the lives and sufferings of others would be instilled into some of the manufacturers who now disregard and ignore the common impulses of humanity and to whom the value of a human life is counted in terms of the dollars that it can produce. Such a man is neither of value to the country, to his family, nor to him self. He is in the way at every turn of the road. He is stirred only by tv dollar to which he sacrifices himself and all of the principles of his nature. If he has not the respect for and does not value the lives of others, th" Jaw should make him do it. He should be held responsible for the accidents that happen and the deaths that are traceable to his carelessness or neglect. If the statutes were stringent enough, some factories would be placed on a higher, letter bassis, and human lives would not be daily endangered by the pitfalls that now lurk at every step. PRECENDENT. The history of man proves the wisdom of saving and banking against loss. Great men have gone on record to this effect. Nearly every millionaire dates his fortune from the first dollar saved. Every failure will advise you' to save; so will every success. Start a bank account now. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY FORUM OF THE PEOPLE COUNTY ATTORNEY Under the new provisions of a measure to be REFERENDUM voted on by the people of the state at a special rlcvtion iNovemwr , me oiucc or uiim io..... . i MI,AV tKIIC. Ore., Hept. HO.-tKd- attorney for each of the counties substituted in its place. j,(i)r )(f Th !,;( ,r,,rlol -In vlw of As the law now stands on the books, each district attorney hat se -f.a' ,,, (,,r0B( ,ng taken at tin pre counties in his jurisdiction. 'He is allowed to appoint n deputy district a; toney in each of the counties if the business of his of fur makes Mich a lr csr Jure ncces aiy. Most of the various districts now have a deputy in men county. The pav for this official is so small, however, that few lavm III" to undertake the t;k ni'd several of the prosecutors have found it a rather hard matter M keep their list of deputies straight from one term of the grand jury to tue oilier. "The laborer is alvn i worthy of his hire" and the officers who handU the vat volume of business that now passes through the office of the prose cuting attorney should I e paid in proportion to that business. It is not at all conducive to the bet interests of the community at large tl at the state'. tepresentative should be paid such a measly pittance us I .ivy Stipp .deput; district attorney for Clackamas county, for instance, receives. No one can hardly blame the attorney for wanting to resign and for forcing a delegation to come to the city with the office on a silver platter before he would accept it. A busy man can hardly be expected to work for nothing and the official who spends as much time devoting his energies to the county business as doe the Clackamas county attorney should be paid in proportion. Under the new system, the county attorney would receive $2100 for his services, while the district attornies now receive, on an average, of $2700 a ear. The present prosecutors would be nssigneJ to their home counties while the governor is empowered to appoint others for those counties where the office would be vacant. There is nothing in the law that justified the slapping on the referendum and placing the matter before the people for final vote. It is a good law, through and through. It is a law that should have been enacted years" ago. There is no sense in trifling with such a proposition as this merely for the sake of politics or the district attornies now in office whose annual salaries will be reduced. The thing at issue is efficiency in public service. It is undoubtedly best for the service that this office gives to the people that the man in charge of Mfairs is properly paid for his services. Not only that, but a district attorney w ho has nothing on his mind but the affairs of the county in which he lives will be more apt to have time to attend to those matters in a way that one who has the supervision of several counties cannot do. The law is one that tends for better public service and should b? approved by the people at the November election. MOOSE HERD Evidence accumulates that the Roosevelt-Progressive DISAPPEARING movement was not the birth of a new party hitf merely the expression of a protest cunningly perverted to serve the purposese of per sonal ambition and personal revenge. There was the failure of the "New Party" in Mr. Roo.wvclt's own New York to qaulify as a party for a place on the official ballot. Then came the election in the Third Maine district, resulting Republican victory through the return of a round half of the voters for Roosevelt in November to their former allegiance. That the "Moose herd" is disappearing from the political landscape in the West as well as in the East is clearly shown by the judicial primary vote last Saturday in the fifth Illinois supreme court district, consisting of Peoria, Grundy, Stark, LaSalle, Bureau, Henry, Putman, Marshall, Woodford and Knox counties. Last November Roosevelt beat Taft in all these ten counties. He also ran ahead of Wilson in seven of them. In the ten combined he received 36, 106 to 29,278 for Wilson and 26.849 for Taft. What became of all these 3b,106 voters last election? About 35,000 of them declined to go' to the primaries as "Progressives." It is true that there was no heated contest. However, the Progressives as well as the Democrats thought their chances so good in the election to fol low that they had competition for the nomination. But even competing can didates could not galvanize the Progressive corpse. Returns, incomplete but covering all the towns of any size, show that the Republicans, with no opposition to the nomination of Judge Puterbaugh, cast over 12 per cent of their vote last fall. The Democrats, with Messrs, Craig and Bergland competing, got out nearly 16 per cent of their vote for Wilson. Cut Messrs, Shay and Root, the Progressive candidates, received only about 1,000 votes together, or less than 3 per cent of the number cast for Roosevelt I Only one' conclusion is possible from these figures. In these ten Illinois counties the "New Party" has gone into the museum of political curiosities. Its history is simply a brief paragraph in the infant party mortality record Of course, there will be profuse explanations from ardent Bull Mooserj. But the hard fact remains that a party isn't a party unless its professed ad htrents put themselves on record for it on every possible occasion. . HIS EXCUSE Senator Chamberlain is most ingenious in his reasons for FOR REGULARITY voting for free wool, but he is hardly ingenuous, says the Oregonian, He says that there is scarcely ever more than two cent' difference between the English and American markets, while the duty is cqvivalent to from 5 to 7 cents a pound. He cites this as evidence that duty does not benefit the woolgrower. The truth is that, while ostensibly enjoying the benefits of protection, the woolgrowers have been suffering all the ill effects of free trade. The wool schedule has been made the particular mark of all recent attacks on the tariff. The Payne-Aldrich bill was no sooner passed than President Taft, while approving the bill as a whole, pronounced this schedule indefensible. Ever since that time congress has been discussng bills to reduce or abolish the duty on raw woo!. This continual threat of tariff reduction has been a powerful weapon in the hands of the buyers wherewith to bear the price, un til, as Mr. Chamberlain says, it approximates the English price. Such a con dition is no fair index to the comparative effects of free and protected woo!. The senator's statement that he favored a 15 per cent duty on raw wool as a revenue and not as a protective measure does not agree with the state ments he made on the one occasion when he broke over the party traces. On that occasion, though his remarks were carefully excluded from the congres sional record, he announced his refusal to sacrifice the interests of the wool growers of his state at the dictates of the caucus by voting for free wool. Now he denies that those interests will suffer. It is easy to judge on which occasion Mr. Chamberlain expressed his real sentiments. The expunged speech was evidently the spontaneous outburst of a man who had long chafed at party restraint. His recent interview has all the characteristics of a labored excuse from a man who has been whipped into line. A NEW There is a new lineup in the Balkans, the scene of never-ceasing ALIGNMENT war. The creation of a state of Albania, one of the re sults of the strife between the Turks and what were popularly called the Bal kan allies, is serving as one of the bones of contention. It is probable that had there been no intervention by the "great" powers of Europe, there would have been no new Albanian state and consequently one less cause for disagree ment. But the autonomous government was established and the trouble is or. worse than ever. After the treaty of London there was a disagreement between Bulgaria and the rest of the former allies; Bulgaria lost that fight and with it, much territory gained from the Turks. And now we have the spectacle of a thrd war, this time between the Greeks and Scrvs on one side and the Albanians on the other, the object being for the two older countries to get for themselves slices of Albanian territory. The cause for this latest falling out is the charging of bad faith made by the Servs and Albanians to ward each other, with the Greek government getting in the game to secure some more spoils. The main show in the Albanian-Scrvian-Greek tent has for its side show a revival of the war spirit in Turkey with more than ap parent indications that the Bulgarians are willing to tie up with the sultan to get revenge on the former allies; object, more territory. It's a great little game, this, and the powers must be gratified to know that had it not been for their interference the first encounter with the allies against the Turks would have meant the obliteration of the Mussulman from Europe, with some chance that the allies then would have been satisfied. lit time, In tlio futiiro wulor supply for Oregon t'lty, 1 would Ilka to miiko a f'W lllgKoatloll, Plrat: 1 the upper Claeknmua river available for water upply In Oil county? If It In avnllnlilu I thera any reason why Oreiion fly with It r rounding territory, nil of tue north Ido of the ClNcKnmii river ami all of (ho wet ldu of th Willamette river, in Clackaum county, could not li.t lionded to build a le line? I' seem to me tlmt an Independent w ter ayateui would lo much better than for the whole country to defend on getting Hull Hun. The upper Clack amaa river must tie n Kod water a Hull Hun. and a pipe IIiih from tlmt aourqi would supply all of tlie Int r venltiK country, luc'iidlng Ksliicailii, (Ireahnni, Snnnyeldo, .Mllwaukle, Clackamas and all of the country I tween Mllwaukle and Oregon t'lty. and on tlie weat aide from Oawego, south a fur a Willamette. I am eut laflod Ilia', the people of Mtlwnukle would vote three to on for bond to Imlld an Independent system from the above source. V. C. IIAHI.OW. WOMAN FEELS 10 YEARS YOUNGER Since Lydia E. ViukrumV Vegetable Compound Re stored Her Health. CURIOUS HERMIT CRABS. Thty Ksp Houatmaid, and All Um Spongsi For Protection, It ba bwu said that crab are a artful a "a barrow load of monkey. " and no on who ha read l'rofeaaor Edward Step' "Metumate; A Book of Btruuge Companionship In Nature," will deny that there la conalderable truth In the remark. Amnxlng Indeed art kiim of th revelation which tti professor make rcgurdlug crab. II relate, for Imitation, how th common hermit crob actually keep a housemaid to clean out hla bona. When he drat atarta life thl particu lar specie of crab hunta for aotue Urge ihelltlxh' ahell in which he can live at enae, rent free. II uaually chooae a large whelk ahell and Introduce a large enwonn. lelonglng to wbat la known the "iierel" family and which grow to a length of nil or eight Inches, to keep th Interior of the ahell clean. Th crab feed hearti ly on aea i-retitnrea that wander care leaxly Into the ahell and throw the In digestible part of them about the door The tierela worm promptly con sutr.e the remalna and keep the (hell a clean aa a new pin. The artfulnerai of I hla crab, too, la strikingly Illustrated by the Ingenloua nianuer In which he protect himself agnltwt tb large (lab which look upon bliti aa an excellent article of food. Sometime be Induce apoug to grow oo hla ahell. 8Mingea in a IMng condition give out a atnmg odor, which la dlatlnetly unpleanuut to Ash, and even a dogflxb will not attack a crab protected In thla manner. "So yon think that a college educa tion leave a girl letter equipped for domestic life?" "Ye." replied Mliw Cayenne "When a wiuiiiiu liwea her leiiiHr It munt be xtiue comfort to her btixlmnd for her to espren herwlf gmimiiutlral. ly and ervn claaaUally."-Waablngtoo Star. Living Taatimonial. "No uiuu cuu acrve two a(or.' olwerved the good pnraon Who w vlxltlna the ,nlteutl.iry. "I know It," re.'lled ennvirt 1311 "I'm In here fot liliimy."-Clurlnnal Etniulrer. IllvtlU. Ky.-"1 tnko great plena ur In writing to Inform you of what l.ydln v.. rinknam Vegetable Com Hiund ha dono for me. 1 wa weak, nervoua, and cared for nothing but lleep. Now I Can go ahead with my work dally and feel tn year younger than before I darted taking your medi cine. I will advlae any woman to coimilt with you before) going to a doclor."-Mr. INtr.B WIL MS, 1HJ Hank SL, LouUville, Ky. Another Sufferer Itrlle-vrri. Romayor, Texan. "1 aulTered terri bly with a displacement ami bladder trouble. I waa in mUery all Ui time and could not walk any diatance. I thought 1 never could Ik cured, but my mother advlaed me to try l.ydia K.l'lnk liain'i Vegetable l'omMund and 1 did. " 1 am cured of the displacement and the bladder trouble la relieved. I think tlie l'omHiuriJ it the lineal medicine on etrth for auiferlntf women." Mr. Viou JahTKK, Komayor, Texaa. If job waat aperlal advice write to I jdla V.. rinkbam Xedlcla Co. (eon II -dcallali l.jnn, Man. Vour teller will be opened, read and answered by a wotua and held l strict eoalldene. Train and Track. The railway station at Oalara, In I'eru. I KIWI feet alniv sea level. There were I.OU falnlltle on Hrltlsh railroad last year, nfty-iiln lea than the year before. novel algnallug system I being tried on (iermau railway. Parabolic mirrors a Unit eight and one-half feet long are Died un au axle, ou wbU-n they are revolved by tneana of elec tricity. They are "worked" during the day by amillght ami during the night are lighted up by eloetrlclly aud are discernible at a great dlstauce even during foggy weather. Automobile Runs. The way of the transgressor I hard n the Joy rider.-rhlmdolphla Itecord. Accident will happen even In the bKt regulitted rumlllee. but the beet regulated families minimise the chance by driving their automobile carefully.-rbleago New. In Georgia the court of appeal ha declared "automobile bv no motion oly of the hlghwaya nor any priority of right In Mielr use." lu( Georgia la such n old fashioned tate.-I,ulladl-phla IKlger. Ijuly (at planoi-The.r sjy you lore good music. Youth - Oh. that doesn't matter. Pray go on. -I, Hire. Ttinuch tharsunto by (sntl suasion sped, lis rnsy ths rvssrvolr pproslmsl. Ton cannot force th tqulne qusdruwd Th squ purs, to InauritUls. -.'iloao Tribune. sj-rTRj Make the Wheels Turn Faster ; ID you ever stop to consider the miles and miles you and your horses travel over the road everv year? The hundreds of times you have to bitch up to eo somewhere? And the time it all takes? To come right down to it, you really spend a large part of your life slowly riding over the roads same old roads usually eoing to town, to the mill, creamery, neighbor's, etc., etc. It is a great waste of time in a year; it wears out your rigs, your harnesses, and your horses, and it takes your horses from waiting field work. When a hurry trip comes up, such as the getting of a repair part in harvest time, your horses can go only so fast. Compare this wonderful time-waster with an International Motor Truck Sturdy, dependable, reliable, willing, easy to manage and economical all this the Inter national is. It will do all this daily traveling, over any and all kinds of roads where horses can go and go much faster and much farther. It will turn your trips into pleasure rides. It will add many profitable hours to your life. The motor is simple and powerful. The solid tires eliminate tire troubles. One con venient lever controls the car. Brakes are strong and Bure. Through sand, snow, mud, over hills, the International will travel all day without tiring. Satisfy yourself about the International Motor Truck. Send a postal today, for cata logues and full information, to the International Harvester Companj of America Uacorcorsuuti Portland Ore, REAL ESTATE j Wlllnm Neubuui-r and r Vnullarkeii, lot five, block li m kle pnrk; 110. Matt Anderson to Audi dvson, N. tt N. K. '(i Hen. r. T i . It. 4 U.i t, ' ''58' Matt J. Anderson and wf i drew ( Anderson, K') acre J" ... -jm w, wmiin iiitth, ! .... . iige: II. "" Htnphen Chrlatoiiher in i.,i,.B .... topher. loll It). 17 In qulucy mhin ,h to Mllwaukle; l. mu"1 tinlted Hlntea by patent, tn clrl Ian K. l.leO.I, H. H. VV. t Her ii"" ' T. 7 8 . H. II IC ; i)u acres. Heih (' Young and -f.. ,, , to Julia Young, tract In T, I H n , K.; II- " 1 Julia Young and other i Young, tract In Hoc, D,T, IH It jr. II. Hatue to Kfflo K Youim in ...... township and range; l. Hame lo Julia Young Hloon i-. In Mini township and ratine; Hama to Mliry U Youna ir.t i same township and rmige; fi. Hame lo Annie J. Youiik, iru( u sauia township and rniiKv; Wlllnm v, iHilph and lf.. i llam I. Graham, south tinir H li t section M. T. 4 8., It. J K ; lno I. T. Hart ami wife to Mount ,h tjtnd company, W. H w. i, n v sec lion su, i . j h., It. l K ; 0 IVter Mndlaon to I. J. Mrh,iovu. and wife. T. i 8., It. ! K ; lu I laildllie M. Hleplien lo Kllulu.il, Grimm, tract In aoctlou 27, T la u T K.; 1 10 ,n Julia Matwell to rountv of rtirk ma for road purposes, tract in h R corner of N. K. , section v. Tin It. 7 K. Molnll Clacks maa Unit a Inuim. nient company lot numbered ou block 3. Molalla; 110. HhlrU.y Hues u, wife to I,. Mor gan ami wile, lot one lo sli. Irn-lu. slve, Mllwaukle; s3i. II. K. Cross and wife In James Hlmn. on and wife, lot five, iv. block I, west sine so lllion 10 Oregon Cltr tir.o. Harry A. lJiHaru and wife m yr garatla r. Church. 8 V. H. w U 8. N. W. 4 l ectlou 2. T 4 R, h h K . 7 1) acre; IliitiHl. Kllen Mali Hnckwuod to Jraili Darling, lot four, block Id; tci. Mary Elisabeth Chapman and hui hand. Itoaa Charlotte Taylor to Josmk Hamtiel Taylor, tract In section 4, , T. J . it. 1 w.; Hame to Itoaa Charlotte Taylor nxl Charles I'ercy Taylor, tract In in township and range; II1100. Jamea Kaamuason, to Axik-s Ollrli McKlroy. lot one in block ti, Uliv thorn addition; 145. John Htraus and wife to Kmll Nut. hahn, tract In N. W. 4 of N. W. section IX. T. 1 8., It. 4 K ; J.V0. II K. I'elrce and wife to W II. W.hl, tract in section 13, T. S 8 , It. 1 W J 31'I0. J. C. MeCrew and wife lo Gpoi-m P. Unt, 8. , N. K. aeriloa 17, T. & 8. H. 3 K ; 110. Mary J. T. Taton to John Klelnoe der and other, tract In N. W. V of section 6, T. 1 W.; 2"uo Mary Putman and wife to Ms ll L Kmlth, lota one, two, three, 17, 11, block 19. MtlwaukK I HI. J. K. Hoyer aud wire to ivter PtahV a. trr.rt In T. 2 8.. II. 1 K : II. Kredrlch IMker to Adolph II Oik. er, K S N. W. . aecllon 31, T. 1 8. It. 1 3.; Moo. Hame to August r. Dclker. W. H. S. W, quarts, lecdon 31. T. I It. t E.; Joo. (ishe Mataon to Kdllh Matson, lot 17. block V; 110. section 19, T. 1 8.. It. 7 K : $10. Harah A. Korsythe and other to Otto K Melndll and wife, tract, T. 3 8.. It. 2 K.; IJOO. National Surety company to Ik Krank A. 8weney company, tracts II, 42. plat II. Woodburn tin-hard con pany; 1. A mm 8. Warren lo Oregon City, lota 6 and 7 In block 9. Park addition to city In payment of asscssinc 111s 'of Hlttoonih street; It. V. W. MKer an ) wife to On-o City, block I3X In city, for snme; $1. Charlc U Coonrail and wife lo An na Hcault . lot 35 to IIS, Inclusive, hlcH-k 40, Ml ni horn addition, rorl'aiiJ; $i. (icorge ('. Ilmi to Frank W. Ur4, trnot In T. S 8.. It. 2 K.; II". A. K. I-Yost and wife to Krank E. Andrew, lot even .eight In Krulb vllln acr-s; $10. I. I Clarke and wife to I. P. lJu; Ins, tract In section 2. T. 4 8., It. 2 E ; Krnest llrand Jr.. to K. K. Illley ni olh -r. 8. K. H. aectlon 2, r. 4 8.. R. 6 K.; K S N .K. ' 8. K. 11 nam townahlp and range; 110. C. Hchiiehel and wife to (icorge t. lint:, tract In T. 3 8.. It. 2 K.; H- CLACKAMAS ABSTRACT TRUST COMPANY. Land Titles Examined. Abstract of Tltl Mad. Office over Hank of Oregon City. CLATSOP COUNTY MAY VOTE ON BOND ISSUE AflTOIHA. Ore.. Hpl. 25-Tho pro greMlve cltlvien of Cla'sop roi-.n y. not to be outdono by other In lower Co'umhla river section. r now aKltiitlng the qiieitthin of voti"? on a loo,0')0 boml lsu ior roada at the November election. prlnclpnl object In the move la to alat the Columbia Highway aH-laik In estnhllHhlng the propoa-'d li'"'1"'' from I'ortlnnd to the a via At"i- To construct the highway throw Clntaop comity It is neci-aanry to l" bond to ralaa the required fund. " petltlona are now being clrcul.il. throughout Ihe county to put tho V tlon on the ballot. The petition n ' ba filed by October 1, otherwise tn election will be illegal. The plan of those thlnd the mo ment Is to Issue a series of 20 K bonds, Vhlch wtll draw 6 per rent in lerest. The first series s to be W 1100,00(1, and will bo pln,',1 the direction of the Clntaop county court, whIU the aetuul cons r irtlon work will be under the anpervlalon 0' the state highway commission- DON'T LET BABY BUFFER WITH ECZEMA AND SKIN ERUPTIONS liable need a perfect "kln-cov-rlnK Skin eruptions cauae them not on Intense siifforlng. but hinder in growth. Dr. Hob.on's Ezcem" m.nt can be relied on for relief an permanent cure of suffering nan whose skin eruptions have made in life miserable. "Our baby wM '"11". ed with breaking out of the skin s over the face and scalp. Doctor an" kin peclallst failed to help. " tried Dr. Hobson's Eczema O "! and were overjoyed to e baby com pketely cured before on boi u.ed," write. Mr.truhler. Duhuq'' Iowa. Huntley Rroa. Co.. Or City, Hubbard and Canny. Pfelffer Chmlel Compny. SL'Loul Mo. Phlladlelphi. r