OIJIWON CITY, OKMWON, FRIDAY, NOVKMItKK It. WW vviON CITY ENTERPRISE Published Evsry Friday. E. E. BROOIE, Editor and Publisher. Entered Rt Oregon City. Oregon. Postofflce at second class matlor. Subscription Rates: Ona year 1 Six Months 7j Trial Subscription. Two Months .'.'!!.!.!.'!!!.' :i'b Subscribers will find the date of expiration stamped on thotr papers fol lowing their name. If Inst payment I not credited, kindly notify us, and the matter w ill receive our attention. Advertising Rates on application. Progressive everywhere have taken the stai'il IN r.Sl XIP.XT that good roads are necc.is.iry to the proper development of the rural districts upon which towns are built. The counties of the old vorld have long ao reconnirj the fact that a xxi road is the highway to profit. They have seen the muddy mule paths grow into paved boulevards over which the farmer could draw his product to market and could haul his gmuls into the city at a cost so much less than the American farmer pays .is to make a comparison rcdiculous. Experience over there has taught them many things. Though their dis tances are, ad.nitedly, less than ours, the same principle applies. If it cos's three and four times their charge to haul goods from the farm to the city mar Let, something is radically wrong with our system. There is little need for argument for good roads. Almost even-body nowadays believes in a piod road. Some, however, do not appreciate the in vesment that agood road hxs for the community that it serves for few t ihcm have had the advantage of living on an up-to-date thoroughfare where the mud tax is eliminated. They have not had the chance to see the good road in operation and to study its wonderful effects upon the cutting of the cost of transportation. People appreciate the sen ice that a railroad gives. They understand how the cost of freight is cut and transportation facilitated. They believe in the construction of railroad lines and few would in this day and at oppose the construction of as many lines as could be induced to penetrate any given sec tion of the country They see where transportation costs are cut by the two lines of connected steel and the ease with which their crops can reach mar ket over the steel roads. As a concrete example of this point, Molalla has for years been shut off, .1 II 'J T. L I I I . t f . ,. , irum inc worm outsiuc. it nas oranenca out into me country trom its little valley by stage lines running from Oregon City and other points. All of its freight that reached the people of the outside of this pleasant valley has had to go through roads that were mud filled and boggy. Only a few passable roads exist in this county today. With the coming of the electric road, the people of Molalla have seen the wonderful opportunities that are before them. They have awakened to the possibilities that the markets of the outside world has brought to them. These possibilities and opportunities have come with the coming of the railroad. The old pioneer days in Molalla are but a memory. The people of that city are progressive, wide awake, resourceful and they know the meaning of those two lines of steel rail. x It means much to them and it will mean as much more as they take ad vantage of the chances for growth and development that has come with the road. Molalla is now on the map. It is a railroad point. Its population will grow and the country around it will developc. All of this prosperity has come through the construction of that road into a town that has for years been shut off from communication with the markets outside of the valley. These facts are just as true when applied to the construction of a hard surfaced road. It means just as much to the people living along the road as it does to the people of a community hitherto shut off from transportation facilities when a road is built through the territory. In all countries and states where hard surfaced road has been built, the farmers have discovered an increase in profits and a corresponding decrease in the transportation cost. Because a farmer uses his own team and wagon to bring his goods to market is no reason that it does not cost him actual hard earned money to haul that product to the place he sells it. In countries with good roads, farmers seldom use the rail lines for dis tances under 20 miles. They find that they can haul their heavily loaded wagons into market at a small cost and in a short time and that it entails a smaller outlay than paying freight bills over the road. In this country, and jarticularly in this county, a small load, could hardly be hauled 20 milw in a day sometimes it could not be hauled at all. During the winter month here, the conditions of the roads are such that they are barely passable at all. Certainly heavy loads cannot be carried over them. This is a tax on the people a tax greater than would be the annua! cost of any bond issue that were made to cover the construction expense. Bec.utst it comes in a way that the farmer does not feel it is no reason or argument that the cost isn't just as exactly as any exhorbitant rate that the county or ftate could levy. It is a mud tax a tax on dirty, boggy roads. It is a charge placed against the people for allowing such conditions to exit. These conditions can be corrected if the people but awake to the import ance of the good road and decide that the boggy, impassable road is t. be ban ished forever from Clackamas county and that the improved highway is to be substituted in its place. O THOSE STOCK Reports from Portland tell of the first arrests made SPECULATIONS under the provisions of the new blue sky law. Two loss. There is now no question but that the law as enacted by the legMatur f this state will protect the people from many of these schemes that hav made the western states more or less notorious for the past few years. Al sorts of fakes have been perpetrated by these scheming simulators and tin- lu.ve launched cver thing from new irrigation prifjects to insurance and ac culent companies. There is no more notorious or worthless rascal generally than the man who takes the small earnings of others through the medium of some of these lake schemes. The law is wise in providing a felony punishment for the perpetrator of such schemes and the punishment of the man who is guilty u them. In .1 . it i . , i i . i n urn me simerings mat nave ncen nmugtit to the new settlers in west ern states and landed on new irrigation projects that were worthless are alone considered, regardless of the thousands of other wavs bv which the speculators profit, there is mi punishment short of the extreme penalty that is too severe in riding the state of a pest of this kind. The man who brings people from the Kat to settle on land that he knows nevet has seen watr and could not get water until dahricl blows his horn, is a felon in the begin ring and the law but so declares him when it sends him to the penitentiary ot the state. He has made other to suffer. Why should he not get a tate of some of his own medicine? It is not in the spirit of vengance, however, that the state should look at such matters for the state and socirty generally has no interest but in its own protection and the reformation of the criminal. Hut it is a protection to the state and a wall of rock between the innocent and unexperienced investor and the man w ho schemes and plots to get his money that a law of this kind is needed and that it has been enacted by the legislature of the state. I his is the first case that has been brought under the new law. It will probably mean that the statute will receive its first test in the courts. Though it is highly probable that- the law will find its way successfully through the labyrinth of the courts, there is need for some sort of a law that would pro tect those who need just such protection froiu the fake plotters and get-rich ouick allingtords that permeate the western states and have permeated those states for many years past. Stories are daily printed in the newspa rers of the country of the sufferings of settlers who have been "bunked" b these enterprising fakers. Many are the stories of death by suicide that have come as the result of absolute hoplesxness of men and women on some of these tracts in our western states. Many are the reports of failures in the finan cial lines, loss of business, loss of homes, loss of families because of the nefari ous designs and notorious plots of these schemers. It is to be hoped that the new law will have the effect that it was intruded by the legislature and that it will successfully eradicate such a pest from this state and become an example to other western states in evicting legislation that will protect the innocent and the helpless from the unscrupulous and designing. -O- men have been held under the provisions of the act and are charged with the violations of the law. They have, according to the charges against them, sold stocks in their corporations before they obtained a permit from the sec retary of state. In this way, the blue sky law stands as a bulwark between the people and the speculator. It protects the women, the widowed, the fatherless from die smooth and oily dispenser of worthless stocks. In this and other states for the past several years, there have been numbers of schemes that have floated I in which the widows and orphans suffered most heavily. A loaded gas bag, an inflated proposition from beginning to end, they nevertheless attracted the person with a small amount of capital to invest and take the savings of years from those who were the least able to stand the WHEN SOME ONE ASKS YOU how to send a bank draft or take out a time certificate can yu answer them? If not, would you not like to know? There is no way of getting accquainted with bankiag terms like having a bank account of your own to handle. Even a small bank account is an educator, and a large one enables you to move in the same plane with the business men and makes you familiar with business and financial terms. The Bank of Oregon City OLDIST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY LET US NOT SWALLOW According to an Associated Press dispatch MILITARY FAIRY TALES from Washington, "for the first time in hitsory Uncle Sam is in readiness, at a moment's notice, to arm and emiin 500,000 men in the event of war." Reading further we discover that a "plan" for doing all this has been "worked out during the last six years through the systematic and unremitting labor of Lieutenant Colonel J. T. Thompson, under the direction of Brig adier General William Crozier." We know nothing about Colonel Thompson. On the face of the record he must be, a studious officer. General Crozier is an ordnance specialist of international reputation. But when we read still further we are compelled to doubt the statement first quoted. For we read that under the "plan" the regular armv "would be in creased" to its maximum strength, the "entire organized militia" would be trustered in "at full war strength," nnd the remainder would be raised by the "enlistment of volunteers." All of which shows that the government is not "in readiness, at a moment's notice," to put 500,000 men into the field, but merely has what i regarded as a good "plan" for doing it. And a "plan" Isn't an army. The plain truth is that we haven't, even potentially, ready for service at short notice 500,000 soldiers or anything like that number. The present strength of the regular army, in the mainland United States, is 55,000 men. These are "ready for service," so far as they are actually in the army and are not rather recent recruits. Now that the talk in Washington is again in the direction of interven tion in Mexico the Washington correspondents gather hints of an expedition ary force of 30,000 to 40,000 men. But to make up that number they are compelled to suppose that the 16,000 .coast artillerymen will be drafted from their posts of duty and sent into Mexico as infantry! We don't suppose for a moment that the war department or any responsi ble man in it authorized such a delusive ctatrmfnt ac tin I k...,. ...- .....fc - ...... .119. uiivilu Mll'Vl. Probably some second assistant deputy clerk gossiped about the "plan" to a .Vastungton reporter and he put on this gossip an interpretation not justi fied by the facts and productive of a dangerous self-complacency. Army officers are practically forbidden, by somewhat silly regulations, to talk about service matters for publication. But if their statements in private conversation may be trusted the United States has neither artillery nor, am munition for it, nor even small arms and cartridges for them, ready to 'equip" an army of 500,000 men at "a moment's notice," and couldn't do 't under several months. Furthermore, it takes about a year properly to train an infantry soldier, at least eighteen months to train a cavalryman and his horse and three or four years to make a competent artilleryman. When we permit ourselves to forget these vital facts and our minds to be filled with such fairy-tale inferences as are quoted in the first paragraph above we encourage congressmen in the attitude of almost criminal neglect of the army out of which we will some day draw such military reverses as rill fill the whole nation with rage and shame. O SCHOOL PROBLEMS The problems of education that this county and OF THE COUNTY every other one in the state has to face are such that REAL ESTATE no county court can afford to play with fire in its selection of the man who is to handle the affairs of the schools. Education is an important factor in the reduction of crime. It is an im portant force in the elevation of the intelligence of the community, of the county and of the state. For that reason, it is a matter of vital importance that the county courts of the state should be extremely careful in the selec tion of the man who is to havejromplete charge of the educational matters in the county and whose dictum is final on all matters that pertain to the county schools. The court of this county realized that proposition when it made the selec tion of J. E. Calavan for county superintendent yesterday It appreciated the responsibilities that he has to shoulder and the difficulties that he must i meet. It also appreciated his ability to meet them. For many years, the new ; superintendent has been connected with the rural schools. He has had ample i opportunity to see the conditions in the schools as he has become acquainted with them in his travels from one district to the other and from one institu- tion to the next through the several districts. He knows the conditions as ; they are and he is well able and thoroughly prepared to meet the problems j that will be brought before him in his new place. As a teacher in these schools, he has already met some of those problems. As county superintend ent, he will be called upon to meet many more of them and on a larger scale. It is well that the court made its selection as it did for it found in the new superintendent a man worthy of the place and careful of wisely discharg ing its duties. So many capable men are to be found in the small rural schools of the county that the court had hard work in finally determining the man for the place. Experience is a great teacher and there are several men in the districts who have had lots of it and would make good superintendents. The action of the court it a wise one in this instance and the good work that was started by Superintendent Gary will be ably continued by his suc cessor. The Enterprise is heartily interested in every phase of the educa tional problems of the county and it believes that the new superintendent is a man whose experience and training is balanced by a judgment and clear sightednesa that will bring material results in the way of improving the conditions of the county schools. David Orlmid Howard In W. W. Ir win, nil of Miiry A .Hinckctt tract; It. I). Jack nnd wife In Aaron I.. Voder, t acres In N. Is N. W. V sec tion IS, T. 5 B It. 1 K.i $;ioo. Clara Dear and hiiHhund lu 1'. lion litiimil and wife, lot II, llciinlinnii's aero; fit). I. J. Iletiiilmun and wife to Andrew IV Wilson, lot 11 In lleiiiiliiuiu's Acres; $2000. Sarah Kluier and liitHhuiid to Harry Aneoltt and wife, lots Si and 1!S block A, Keer addition to Mllwsuklc; IS.' I. Dorothy Ahliott to II. F, Joins, 10 acres in section 3.1, T. 1 H It. 3 IC; 110. Hume to Nellie A. Ilium. 10 neres In section 3:i. T. IS., It. 3 h: 110. Nellie A. lUnn to II. F. Jones, 10 neres III section 33, siiiiim township and range; ltd. C, II. Itohesou and wife to t'nrl II. liuKKiimii mid wife 12.2 sens lu An drew Hood D. I. C; $20. K. P. Denier nnd Joe 1 1 it mm to Peter A. Ailnnnli and olhers, liiu neres In section 13. T. 3 8.. It. 3 K.; Ill WO. Otto M. Kiiiisinnli nnd wife to Ward M. I'lHrk nnd wife, 25 acres In seellou 3, mid 10; T. 3 H It. 3 K.; t'JIM). linninn'K'l Herman Mclhodlnt K. church of Mllwnukln to J. II. Schutc, ot 1 1. Mock one sub tract three lu link drove; f:ioo. Helnrlch II. Nairn and wife to J. II. Imie, lot II lu sitme block and ad dition; (I. J. H. Scliiilit nnd wife In Grace K. Lodor, lot II block one. same tract and addition; !!.. . H. Curtis and wife to Fred Juu- ger lot one block two, addition to Ore gon City; II. Fred .lunger to George Itednwny, lot one, block two, llenlle'a addition to irenon' Cll ; I Hi. John Sobrlst to (ilovnnna Hattlska. 2.S acres In section SO, T. 3 8.. It. 4 ; IJoTo. ('sill II. Charlton to J. P. Hnvdor. E. S. K. aectlon 30. T. 3 H.. It. K.; 10. Klmer I'hehis and wife to Thomas II. Jiiiues, tract In 8. E. section five i acres; S50. Thomas II. Jumes and others to Arthur Howniua, 25 acre In section five, T. 3 S.. It. 6 K.; HJiO. Martha Uwry to Annum Zee tract In D. U C. rhllaiider l.ce and wife: fsoo. K. U taley and wife to F. A. liax r. lots five and six block one, Karl rest; 127S. Gladstone Keal Kstatn association Julia J. TliiKle, lots three, four to elKht, Inclusive, block M. CUidstone; I. Oeorxla l. Meldrum and husband to harles K. Meldrum, tract lu s tion 9. T. 2 8.. It. 3 K.: I2i. MaKXle A. Uluer to William C. I 'ear son and others, one acre In T. 3 8., It. k.; iioo. II. r. Clearwater to Nora A. Clear water, seven acres In section 25 T. 1 .. K. I K.; 10. Lewis C. Hunton and wife to Jane ewton, U 10 acres In If. 1 C. of Thomas Jackson; fl. II. K. Jones and wife to O. T. Helen- er .tract In 8. K. V section 33. T. 1 , H. 2 K.; $.1500. Willis Msyfleld and others to Sumls- Huyden Lumber company. 8. W. N. K. U section 27. T. 3 S.. It. 3 E.: It. I'ra 8. Crewel) to A. II. Combs, lots three, four, five In block 12. Mount- lew addition to Ortuon city; $10. Frank W. Heard and wife to A. 11. onibs, lots six, seven, block one. In liiKston; $10. Fred Clark and wife to William M. mllh and wife, lots four and five. In block 34; II. Michael MeCormlck lo Charles (I. Martin, one acre lu section 17. T. 2 S.. R. 5 K .; $150. K. Grace Sailor and husband to lun M. Hlalr. lots 11. 12. In block elK-ht, Cnnhy; $450. Kllen Maria Kockwond to llronte 8. Oravat lot 12 In block II, Ardenwald: $400. Anna M. Johnston to Maxxle Hlsnl, lots one and two, Bolton; $10. Eutaeada Realty company to Jesse Stubbs afld wife, lot five In block two. Terrace addition; $5. V. C. Miller to Kllza 1). Miller, W. H N. W. 4 section 35. T. 6 8., 11. 2 K.j $10. C. A. Jackson to John Taylor and wife, lots 15. 1. In Itobblns addition to Molalla; $1550. 1'ortlnnd Water Tower and electric transmission company to Kstncada Realty compnny, lot seven, block one, lot one, block four, lota tliree, 25. '35, 40. 41, block five, lots nine, block seven In Terrace addition; $i!00. Same to same, tract In Terrace ad ditlon; $500. Kstncada Realty company to C. 8. I'yle. lot 10, In block five. Terrace ad dition; $5. Same to same, lot five block five. Terrace addition; $5. Same to Hertha M. Cary. lot 44. block five, Termce addition; $.". Same to O. O. lllnnd. lot 48. In block five. Terrace addition; $5. Hnme to Mary E. Kshle.man. lot two In block one. Terrace addition: $5. Same to Irean 8toke Cary, lot 14 In block four. Terrace addition; $5. Same to .George O. DeShlias, lot 15 In block five. Terrace addition; $5. Same to Carl F. Cary, lot 45 In block five, Terrace addition; $5. Same to Charles M. Sparks, lot six, block five, Terrace addition; ''$5. Same to Val E. Cary, lot 15, block four. Terrace addition; $5. Mount Hood botel company to F. A. Rosenkrans, one-third acre In N. W. V4 section five. T. 3 8., R. 7 E.; $1. Henry L. A. Sturm and wife to Geo W. Kahl, tract In section 18, T. 3 8., R. 2 E.. $7250. Thomas R. A. Sellwood and wife to Inlz Williams, lots seven and 11 In block 11, Mllwaukle; $500. Same to Ell Johnson, lot eight In block 12. Qulncy addition to Mllwau kle. $1. F. J. LIchtenberRer and wife to Charles Mathlson, lot five In block two, Oak Grove; $10. W. 8. Griffls to W. E. Grlffls, lots II, 12, 13, Park subdivision In block 135. Gladstone; $1800. Thomas Illanchard and others to Herman Anthony, lot four block two, New Era; $15. R. Hecker to Thomas Macqulre, sec tions 19 and 16, T. 4 8., It. 1 E., 40 acres; $10. 8. J. and HOUSEKEEPERS Must be Watchful v blvc1 vwvii MM uiuig mauc m this vicinity to sell baking powders of inferior class, made from alum acids and lime phosphates, both undesir able to those who require high-grade cream of tartar baking powder to make clean and healthful food. The official Government tests have shown Royal Baking Powder to be a pure, healthful, grape cream of tartar baking powdqr, of highest strength, and care should be taken to prevent the substitution of any other brand in its place. Royal Baking Powder costs only a fair price per pound, and is cheaper and better at its price than any other baking powder in the world. K (!. Cnufleld, trustee, to l. II. Kastham, T. 38 , R. 3 K., 50 acres; $1. 1. II. F.ustham and wife lo llaiel Tooxe, T. 3 8., It. 3 E . 50 ncit); $1. Hurry CourtrUht and wife to Haxel Tih, section 20t T. 3 8.. It. 3 K-, 60 acres; $1. Mary A. and W. II. Morris la Miller ft Terry all In Stanley; $i'.ooo. John II. Johnson and wife to the fulled States, bcKlnultiK at me north east corner of the donation land claim of Samuel U Campbell In sectlou 10. raiiK; $'.ioo. Hurry A. I.slinrre and wife to Kk Inald F. Carter K. S N. W. M 8. E. V 8. W. section I, T. 4 8., It. 6 E.; $10. Katie Hsnlon to Mary I Union lots one, two. five, and six In block 21; $aoo J. F. Splxer to David Moehnke and wlfn, lota one and two in Opportunity five arres; $4000. Ctirlstlun Kraft and wife lo UniUe A. Koehler, one acre In N. E. N. E. '4 section 4. T. 4 8.. It. I E.; $1. Warren I). Kluitdon to W. O. Wal ter. N. section 16, T. 7 8, It. 4 E.; $100. HIGH SCHOOL GROWS AS A SOCIAL CtNTEft CLACKAMAS ABSTRACT 4 TRUST COMPANY. Land Titles Examined. Abstracts of Title Mads. Office over nnk of Oregon City. L Fur the benefit of those students In the public schools ot Oregon City whoso courses Interfere with the man ual training classes, a night school In this department has been arranged by authority of the board of education up on recommendation of City Superin tendent Tooxe. The nlKht school In manuul training will be under the direction of I'nter I). Forbes, the high school Instructor and will be held on Tuesday ml Thursday evenings of each week from 7:30 to 0 o'clock. There will be no charge for the public school students. There are a number ot pupils In the city schools who desire to tuke ad vantngo ot tne manual training In struction, but whose daily work takes all of their time during school hours and who will be pleased to learn tliut a way has been opened for ihnm to take work in thla attractive branch In the evenings. Students now enrolled In djy classes of the department will not be permitted to relinquish their work In order to shift Into the night school, It being the purpose of the bonrd merely to accomodate those who have found It possible to do this work during the day hours, without conflicting with their other studies. T E Several applications for changes In the district lines of the school dis tricts were before the county court on Friday. The people of Jennings i-ouge, unerryvllle. and 8tone dis tricts have asked the court friP F.E. Vaughan to William " th'r lines that would give O. Vaughan section 22. 23, In T. 4 8., R. 2 E., 320 acres; $2000. Clackamas Abstract Trust com pany to D. II. Stuart, section 22, 23, 26, 27, T. 4 8., K. 2 E 320 acres; $1. Charles T. Tooze and others and to A. and T. Schaurer, T. 2 8., R. 2 E., $0 acres; $1. Richard Woolsey to D. J. Abbey. In Morris addition to Jennings Lodge; $1 C. M. Dowllng and others to R. R. Gray, tract in May wood; $1500. O. A. Paret and wife to Henry Lug- rstrass, aectlon 24 T. 2 8., R. ( E.; $100. Elmer Jones, to Cyrus E. Judd, T. 6 8., R. 1 E., 320 acres; $1. tnetn larger acreas of territory ami that would add more children to their public schools. The question of the Jennlna Lodge application was discussed at a recent mass meeting ot the people of the Gladstone district. The proposed cut would take In some of the latter terri tory and would bring It Into the dis trict of the Jennings Lodge school. The people of Gladstone seem to more or less approve such a move as tha land proposed to be cut lies close to the neighboring district and Is far from the other building. The matter was taken under advisement by the county commlsioners. That a good practical and rftlctent education doe not con.lnl only of the knowledge to be gained from a study of text books Is believed by tlx iuwr. Inlvndent of schools who ha srrsntrd for study by the student, of ths ear rent problem ducatlonul, wh-IhI, u. dustrlal and, commercial which (hey should help solve even now snd later when they shall enter upon the strlls and competition of the dully artlvltlr of life beyond school or college. He has arranged a coume of loc lures or addrvstes by rltUens promin ent In tha professional, social. Indus trial and commercial f ot the com munity Mild Mlaln In lui lvi-n ml ihm high school adiillorlum at regular In tervals during tha year. AddrttMS Popular. Last year there was given a series ot addresses that were both I nut mo tive and popular among the studcati, also two stnreoptleon lectures, ou 00 "Mirds," 1 y the celebrated InlthnloicUt Mr. lord, and one on "lamdncsps Architecture." by II. E. Weed ,bo later drew the landscape plans for the high school and Hevi-ntli and Twelfth street park grounds. The entertainments snd lecture given In the evening were s part of to effort to make the school kulldlui soclul center, a plan which Is rsrrM on In other cities with varying suc cess. The students responded en Ihuslaatlcally and much good resulted to them but little Interest was shown by cltliena among even those who had been clamoring for such pliiu to b Inaugurated In Oregon City. It Is hoped, however, that larger Interest will be taken In the eiitcrtuintucnls of the nresent vear. Other LscVres. In' addition lo a splendid course of twelve assembly lectures to students and cltUens, to be given by prominent men of this city and state, Or. Ken neth Utourette will deliver two series of six lectures esch. The "Present Problems In the Far Enst," Is the sub ject for th.n first series. The dates nrrnngnd are: Fridays, November 14. 21; IH-ccmber 8, 12, and Thursday, December 18. The subject of the second series li "A Literary Study of Some Hlbllral Charactera of Oldon Times In ths Light of Modern Social Problems. The dates arranged for theso lectures are; Tuesday, November 11, 18. J and December' 2, 9, 16. la Experienced. Few men are so well qualified by both training and experience for this work as Dr. Lalourette. An alumnus of Oregon City High school, a gradu ate and doctor of phlllsophy of Yals University and for some time a pro feasor of history In Yale college, Chnng Cha, he brings to this work a . knowledge, experience and enlhin asm that will make the course exceed ingly Instructive and entertaining. The lectures will be given at 2:3 In the aflernnnn for accomodation 01 cltlzons who might be better able to arrange for attendance then man aur Ing the earlier hours of the day. These courses are open to seniors, alumni and all citizens. It Is hoped that a large number of the alumni and citizens will attend. h This la a unique feature of aW school endeavor and should bo very popular and helpful. Declare War on Colds. A crusade of education which aim" "that common colda may become urn common within the next generation has been begun by prominent N' York physicians. Here 1 a list of tn "don'ts" which the doctors say w' prevent the annual ylaltation of tne cold: "Don't alt In a draughty car. "Don't aleep In hot rooms." "Don't avoid the fresh air." "Don't atuff yourself at meal tlm Overeating reduces your resistance. To which we would add when yon take a cold get rid of It as quickly possible. To accomplish that you wiu find Chamberlains Cough Remeaj moat excellent Bold by all o61 ,