ST. HELENS MIST, FRIDAY. JULY 21. 1916 ' Issued Kvery 1'Ylday by THE MIST PUBLISHING XMINV S. L. MOORHEAD. S. C. MORTON Editor Manager Entered as second-class matter, January 10th, 1912, at the Postoftlca at St. Helens, Oregon, under the act of March 3rd, 1879. SIBSCHIPTION BATKS One Year $1.50 Six Months 75 Advertising rates made known on application. COUNTY OFFICIAL PA I Kit THE DEUTSCHLANI) This under-sea vessel has almost completed storing her cargo and will soon start for her home port in Ger many. Press reports state that many of the allies' cruisers are hovering around the Virginia capes in the hopes of intercepting this vessel which so- successfully eluded them on her trip to the United States. No matter in which direction our sym pathies may lie, there are very few of us who do not wish a safe voyage for this wonderful submarine mer chantman, her officers and crew. The genius of the Germans in con structing her, tho unparalled bravery and fearlessness of the vessel's offi cers and crew in attempting such a hazardous voyage as they made, and their determination to again go to sea in the face of even more danger, is certainly deserving of success, and here's to the Deutschland, and here's hoping that her intrepid commander and the brave crew under him will bring their wonderful craft safely into her home port. INTERNATIONAL MEMORIAL DAY In keeping with the great big heart of the American nation, it is deemed that the time has come for some expression of the real feeling of the American people to each of the European nations, a nation-wide committee of prominent people has been organized to arrange for the observance of the first Saturday and Sunday in August, the anniversary of the beginning of the war, as an International Memorial Day for the expression of sorrow and sympathy for all the human beings involved in the world disaster. A committee of citizens in Topeka, headed by Governor Capper, was the first to go on record for a large com munity demonstration. Groups in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Salt Lake and Ogden followed. Zone Gale offered to write a story on the subject, entitled "Over There;" this will appear shortly in Collier's. Dr. Charles S. McFarland, executive sec retary of the Federal Council of Churches, is taking up with his com mittee the question of designating the first Sunday in August an Inter national Memorial Sunday for church services. WHY WOOL IS HIGH Democratic papers are singing pretty loud these days, quoting the price of wool under the present Un derwood tariff. W'e are free to ad mit that wool growers have roceived fancy prices for their output, but what would tlm price have been had It not been for the great European war? The splendid condition of the market is in no way attributable to the present administration, but rather to the enormous demand for wool with which to clothe 20,000,000 fighting men. If we had protection now the sky would be the limit for prices. We don't need the tariff as long as the war lasts, but we will need it and need it badly when the war ends. . Gold mined In the United States during 1915 amounted in valuo to $101,035,700. Tho quantity was 4,887,604 fine ounces. The produc tion of silver was 74,091,075 fine ounces valued at $37,397,300. Without the formality -of a roll call the house of representatives passed the army appropriation bill, tho biggest budget of the kind In tho history of the United States. The measure carries approximately one hundred and eighty-two million dollars. Speaking from a cattle standpoint, tho Portland Live Stock Journal mukes the prediction that "Bob" Standfleld of Morrow county, will be the next speaker of the house of representatives and C. L. liawley of Polk county, president of the senate. We'll bet a cookie with a hole in it that neither gehtleWn will win out. Take us up it you dare. Auto contests serve no good pur pose. It does not prove the su periority of one machine above the other but is purely a sporting propo sition. A driver Is killed now and then but nothing Is thought of it. Human endurance Is more of a fac tor than the mechanical factor. Re cent cross-continent trips have aroused legitimate Interest because they involved a problem of genuine Importance to the motor industry. THE NOVEMBER BALIOT . Tlio election ballot next November will bo up to tho usual standard. Aside from the presidential nominees and electors, state, county and pre cinct officers, therd will bo eleven htatcwido measures submitted to a vote of the people. Three of them nro submitted by the legislature and and the remaining eight through the initiative. As the time for filing measures closed July 13, the eleven measures constltuto the total num ber. The measures filed by petition are as follows: l'cople's laud and loiyi law; a constitutional amendment to allow the manufacture of beer and its sale in original packages; a con stitutional amendment to prohibit the importation of liquor Into the state for beverage purposes; a con stitutional amendment establishing a normal school at Fendleton; a con stitutional amendment limiting the tax levy that may be made by all tax levying agencies; a constitutional amendment establishing a system of rural credits; a bill prohibiting com pulsory vaccination; a bill repealing the Sunday closing law. The measures submitted by the legislature are: A constitutional amendment giving the governor pow er to veto single items in appropria tion bills; an amendment exempting certain ships engaged in either pas senger or freight, coasting or foreign trade, whose home ports of registra tion are in Oregon from taxes, ex cepting state taxes, until 1935, and an amendment repealing a constitu tional provision forbidding suffrage to negroes. Chinamen and mulattoes. The local measures are: A bill providing for bounty on jackrabblts in Crook county; a bill providing for a bounty on jackrabblts in Lake county; a bill removing the county seat of Jefferson county from Culver to Madras; a bill locating the county seat of Jefferson county at Mctollus, and a bill moving the county seat from Prinevillo to Bend. ivvvvvvvvvvvyrGOOI) HANDLING J INDUSTRIAL REVIEW J llamlon Salmon cannery will operate under new management. Kiii'iii Kulrinount Hrick & Tile T" - "" O GET (..UUU uuuoi (ly ('. Lamb, I). A. i . r.xieum.i.. Poultry Specialist. ) There nro now plenty of ordinary i ir...i.,.- i.lm-m on tho city market Reported by Columbia County Ab ilraet Company. July I-' Seappoomi Acres Co. to A. K. Murlln: tract 2, KoappooHe Aero Triictii. ?! II MeCorinlck to Nolle II Me- Co. get brlek contract for R.mebiirg ; Now Is ,,' 'm" " Zlin.n;trmivk; loU 6 and IS in block 25 federal building and also for now ; noon qua.,., ... i ilioin on a oiii'iity i ... i .. miirki't ut hand I " uu ... . .... ... o .i t :t N.. It. Hi pay you iiinu in f - I,, ti. Allen to K. II. lllnl el ux; 2 'W., electrification of west side S. 1. Hues Into here. Albany Tho new plant of tho Al bany Fruit Julco Co., for tho manu facture of a new drink from logan berry Juice. haB begun operations. -oiiunior Clifford A. llrnmhlo et MX. to Nw- Sheara et ut.; land In Hc. 0 KoEeburg high school. nniiinl Timber intersts consider- . . .. ... . i i . ..I ; ii hat will buy your onus : lllg construction ui .,.,,.iuv it i7r, fJL w, ,i.i.,.nlnrnn Coos Hay. ' Mill price according to ..uall.y . ; J7 5. :,.. ,..... . , ... wrk n! write tho O. A. C. poultry depurt- vuivuiun nuifto ,1,,, ,,,., Ilieill l"l llliw.iii , .... Oregon Co-opemllv,. KgK Circles. and X. T. N .. U. W -. Feed the layers clean. wholeaoiuo July IS- Rudolph . to food. Don't forget plenty of pure Col. Timber Co land In Sec. 30. T. . . . v it v . i: ui). water ami green loon minus i .. . - days. 1'rovulo plenty oi clean, dry I a....i. K Wood to William 0 Wood; land In Sec. 9, T. 7 N., H. 4 W., ll. A.ut D Holadsy et nx, to Churlot K. Riley; tracts 42 and 43. Ill A. lloladay Orchard Tracts. JtiOO. July 1 1 N. P. H. It M.' Celle; land In Sec. 7. T. 4 N.. It. 0 VV., luil 3S. James Amler.ion to M. Colic; lund ti... ni.n l. mnilnrn in everv resnect ' nests (with plenty of and operated throughout by elec- straw In tlieinl to prevent tho Hens trlclty furnished by the Oregon crowding while laying. Results. Power Company. j riy. cracked ami heated eggs Reports received from nearly all ! lather e,gs at least onco a day. sections of Douglas county Indicate In hot weather or under muddy con- .!,.. 11, l voo r,,n nf lirillu'U will ! d It lull!! twU'U II d.l'. far surpass previous years. Mk' practice of cleaning all . , i Killmi iint the saino day gathered loos nay nines v. iuiwj n i"i-- - . , ... iU(i miles of track will bo built by tho j Tho egg shell Is porous and bacteria , in He, 7 1 V. U. I illOO. BeuUner Lumber Company on North remaining on tho egg can penetrate, II. D. i.l.wi et ux. to J""- T Coos river to tap their timber hold-! and conlan.i.iuto It. Oliver; land In So,. 5 a.ul . Y. 4 la cieanlng, no not pin me eKi:s:'- . " in water. I'se a dump cloth to wipe, July 15- S. Vaiitelfdeii el ux. to the shell only where there Is dirt lo! Joseph A. Vurlet et ux ; land In Sec remove. When necessary some ahra-! 2:!, T. 7 N.. It. 2 W., $10. sive sul-stauie (us Hon Ami or S.i-! Walter Auntln et ux. to A. L. Mul- ler et ux. ; lot 12, Murk 2 S. HI. Mol- IC. A. kovss FUNCRAL DIKLCTOR B.uBul,ainltCNJ Buiinni Phi 21 I I'liuss an jrj I no r i. , ' IK, VV. K. IjINHam . -Dm r 1ST St. Helens . ' a '1 lugs In that section." llaker Construction of John Day Hlghwtay, which will connect tho Columbia River Highway with l.ln- Iturt West to llaxel M, coin Highway, will bu started soon. The Dalles Wasco county cherry po'.lo) may he used on tho cloth. stems are being shipped to Kurope! Ku p eggs In cool, reasonably dry, ens, 2.r.0 t n.-to n tt.nt U lined uluco. Keep In a tern penit lire of not j July 17 by opposing armies In France. j higher than 50 to 0 degrees, lie-j West; land In Sees 6 and 7. T. 3 N., Vale Warm springs district will ' tween 35 and 45 degrees Is best. j It. 1 W.. and land III See.. I and 12, build large dam. Work started again 't keep the eisgs near any suh-' T. 3 N., It. 2 W , t. stance having a strong odor; Buchasl Alice M. t.rnhuin el ul to , J. DU. A.C.TUCKEK KKNTIST "I l l- NS. UWm MI-4M.I II o. DR. L. GILRERTROx on Sunset Oil well north of here. North Bend Payrolls have In- keroreno or vegetables. 1'ulliTson; laml In See. 14, T. 0 N., creased 100 per cent since Janu- Afler the lirwding season Is over. : 11. i . 1 . uj.y jt jsiiive io prouueo iiiicrtuo eggs. 11 Astoria is putting up a strong will require aliout 20 days after the fight for a submarine base at port j males are removed lo produce all lo ot Columbia. foiillo eggs. The liens will Pontiuiio llaker Auto tourists spend 17.-i " as wp1 "s ,IH roosters UNCLAIMED LETTERS j aro present. Mom money Is likely DOUBT AND YOU AUK DONK! Doubt and you are done! This applies to everything. Doubt a friend's devotion and It dies. Doubt will kill every motive and bury every ambition. Doubt is tho meanest form of in sincerity. Doubt binds the possibilities, crip ples the activities, crowds out the initiative and leaves a man stunned a living wreck. If you seem to have good reason to doubt a friend or fact, go to the bottom of tilings; settle tho matter. If you have reason to doubt your self, look the troublet squarely In the face; find your weak place and correct it. God 'made a good world and put good Into the hearts of men and good you will find everywhere even in yourself. 1 Doubt is a veil that makes good seem grey and that keeps man from enjoying the blessings without and within. Doubt kills efficiency. Doubt is a disease; an Infections, insidious, low disease. Get rid of It for the sake of your loved ones, for the sake of the world, and for the sake of yourself and your success. Anon. Letters unclaimed ul the St. Hel ens, Oregon, postofflro for tho wek ending July 15. 191 S: (!. Isuao'oil, ('. It. Hilt t nil . Letters iincluiiiied by July 29, 19 Hi, wil be neut lo the division of de.id letters. IVA K. lODI. Post muster. IMl'KOVKMKNT OK IIIGIIWAV.S For the Improvement of highways the Oregon Voter has submitted the following to the various granges, farmer's unions and commercial bodies of the state for consideration. The subject of financing highway im provement Is pressing hard for a so lution and any plan that produces results without adding new burdens to the taxpayer, merits the most care ful consideration. Whereas, the wear on Oregon roads is caused principally by auto mobile traffic, and Whereas, the Improvement- of through highways is of direct bene fit to automobile owners, in saving tiro and other expense, and Whereas, automobile owners as a class aro liberally disposed towards road Improvement and will endure an Increase of auto license fees if the proceeds are to be expended by the state for permanent Improve ment of through roads, therefore be it Reholved, that we recommend to tho 1917 General Assembly of the state of Oregon the enactment of such legislation as will bring an in creased revenue from automobile li cense fees, same to be the basis for providing Interest and sinking-fund payments for bond issues for perma nent highway Improvement by the state. Hoy! Women threaten to wear socks! And with those hlghwater skirts, too! Rainier Revlow. Speed tho day. Spain produces moro than three quarters of the world's supply of olive oil. ST. HELENS BRAND A HOME PRODUCT CANNED FRUIT AND VEGETABLES. WE BUY CHERRIES. PRUNES. PLUMS. BLACK BERRIES, RHUBARB. BARTLETT PEARS AND CABBAGE TO BE CANNED HERE IN THE CAN NERY. THOSE WHO HAVE ANY OF THE ABOVE NAMED WE WOULD BE GLAD TO HAVE THEM COME TO THE CANNERY AND GET A CONTRACT FOR THE SAME. WE ALSO BUY POTATOES IN QUANTITIES. ALL KINDS OF VKCiKTAHI K PLANTS I OH K.U.K 4 00 hero in five weeks. Grants Pass Rich Tungsten ; to ho realized on Infertile eggs ho-; strike reported on Klght Dollar ; '-'"i" they will not depreciate In case ' mountain. j they are subjected to heat while be- Gresham Three blocks on Main I l"K marketed as a fertile egg will. A ! street will bo paved at once. 'sufficient rise In temperature for' Jackson County Twenty-five men ' mit a short time will prod lire germ! will work on 7.000 yard rock crush-; development In fertile eggs An In-; A , , M1t , lug contract for state highway. . fertile egg will retain good quality r,,sutM Grants Pass Utah-Idaho Sugar ....... Co. raises price for sugar beets here. Salem Quick nickelplutlng liquid for auto lamps, etc., invented and be ing manufactured here by W. R. Cllno Co. Paisley to have new $30,000 high cchool. Newbcrg New cannery opened on July 4. Also have new loganberry julco plant. The Dalles Contract let for i2, 486 Madison street subway. Oregon gold output Increased $107,000 first six months of 1916 over same period 1915. Marshfleld C. A. Smith Lumber Co. will build vessel In local ship yard with 1,250,000 capacity, de signed to handle lumber by package system to be completed in five months. Forest Grove to have now $8,000 Christian Science church. Gardiner Contract foo building Jetty at mouth of Uiupqua let to Portland firm for $151,000. Allies have, in last year, paid $1, 500,000 for Oregon and Washington spruce for manufacture of war aero planes. Fossil Bonds sold and work will commeuco soon on manual training building. Stanfield Standard Oil Co. erect ing warehouse, oil tanks, etc., here to serve as distributing plunt for this section. 4 ASK YOUR GROCER FOR WARREN BOY SCOUTS ELECT OFFICERS Tho Boy Scouts of Warren 'have purchased two small wlreleBs sets which will bo Installed and used to learn telegraphy by all tho scouts. They have also organized a Scout bank so a bcouI can deposit his money in the Scout bank and thereby j not havo the trouble he would by depositing It In a bank. Officers were elected on July 7, which nro as follows: John Mystrumi senior patrol leader; Walter LunaJ assistant; Walter Prlekson, patrol loader; Irving Erlckson, assistant or the bull patrol; Verner Rylunder, ! patrol leader; Harvey Hay, assistant of the wolf patrol; Curtis Cooper, patrol leader; Charles Rondure, as sistant of the ram patrol; Ray Harms, scout scribe; Herbert Coo per nnd Leo Farr, color bearers; Ray Harms, musician. for 10 days under conditions that will 1 i poll a fertile egg In 48 hours. It r.hould ho understood, however, that a fertile basket behind the kitch en stove, or on tho warm pantry shelf; !!, exposed prK ,. j,, hot sun on the way to town, ami tho procrastinating method of marketing tho gB by passing it along to sev eral different procrastinating middle men reduce. t1(i value of the e(;KH NOTICE Notice la nnroliv l.,nK i. n . V, . ' bu mi mui me County Roadmaster has filed in this offlco his certificate of completion of the improvement of the E. J Smith Road, under tho contract with George W. Grant. All protests tgainst the accept ance of this contract must bo filed In mto ui ma i;our.ty cinrk with in two weoks from :ho date of the first publication hsreof. Date of first publication July 21st 1916. ' ' A. P. BARNETT, 3 1-2 County Clork. "The Jolly Kulertalneis," consist ing of twenty.four I ltt.lt- children from the Ilea !,...,, Wash., Or Phan's Home, will )0 ,, ,. July 26 and 27. These children lm. excellent 1n.1slela.1a mid the company is composed of tlm unfortunate ones "'"'fed In the horn,,. They have Kiven a nmnlM- of enlerlalnmem ; "'! tl'n press apeuks very highly ,,f their ability ,! , K,...,, il cliar '"''.' of their effort,. They pp(iar ", '"l d musical comedy with ringing and dancing. Th-, pro' oeeds aro for th,, heneflt of . homo. niti:; hkki' i irk! " vmv villi! ,r.::11AH',rl:l,.!,"' uf MMln" Lynch & Tunzat on the Klraiid SANITARY BARBER SHOP KVKHV (TsroMWi HVIISIII,:,, YOU'RE NEXT "T. llla.:xH A I.IVK Nlwiuo ,VK TOWN H. 11. 80NNI.XAND, Prop. FRESH & CURED FISH POULTRY I! I'dness Phono 42; nw (-72 ST. HELENS MARKET lieu llfllvery E. W. KETEL Helms, Ore. IXTIMATFN, l-MXH ' '" Wrk u H, a, I'lioiw 'omictlon No I A .A II. nMrK 11(1 Knife f "IROPRACTORH No ,,, Drugs t. Helens. Oii,Kn PHYSICIAN . OBIr Han Bhl. St. lit! DA? EDWIN ROSS PHYSICIAN A SURVu ocrirh in m.imi hi n un St. Helens Onr- DR. ALFRED J.PEEl PHYSICIAN A SURCEt Miuonlo HulldlnK HT. HEUf DR. H. R. CLIFF PHYSICIAN A SURG Em. Phunt Main m A l'.t; .( ,,,,ta.i:W I'ortlaud.&J GLEN R. METSKER ATTotlNKV Oirtco In (lank HulUial tit. Helena. On. Phona 17 M. E. MILLER ATTORN EY-AT-LA St. Helens 0 mom:V to loan om fif. I'AU.M MOltmlGW E. J. ROBERS0N im t:.i- .,.,.1 Tnict B!i I U 1 lilt U"'l 1 m". Portland, Oregon PURE MILK AND CREAM Furni.hed Dailj ST. HELENS DA!!', S. N. CADK, Propnw ST. HtLENS, OREC0N, Phoiir 107-6. Our fncllKIm ami W"1! fur handling 1 . . . ... l tin" rilillilin u rr' irrailo of milk and rra. In utrlclly aiiltry. Wo aro iiiiIou . ami P'" moro cuKtoiiient koikI nervhe. UutlMfacthm K'W" every reHi't Steamer HooHoc, IMtIVHlli;PllAlll.",'f 1.7IKIIITI.N0, towing 0 K.WIIlHI0 . In PiiHMiiKer Mcllmlnodtlo,, j fill itMiple. ' Hervlco Hew"""'- Invo CIIh ul ' I PI111IIO !2H.