Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, November 05, 1915, Page 4, Image 4

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    ORKOON CITY KNTKUIMIINK. KKID.W. XOVKMIIKIl A. l!M."i
OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE
k. e.
PublUhae' lvry Friday.
MODI I, lliur and aylibr.
ruml at Oraimi CUT. Oregoa. rotonV) 4j coaaU gaallar.
SubMnptl) )(:
.It.'J
Ob yr t
Hit Month ,
Trial HuUeriptloa. To Mouth
Uubwrtbsr U 04 Ik dal of iplratloe tump oa trtelr lPr ful
losing thatlr bim. If Uil pennant I o ercdllwl. kindly aottfy u. aa
th BBkitar III ret our atiatioe.
A4rtlilm RUN oi eppllrattoa.
HT TIIK IHK)K r'ARMKK. L II. MvMarun. prosper... Mar
w im count)' (jrinrr, ItraiU a city nun intutk rrsTiitly' tint "the J
fanner put tip luintini; noiiiTs, and hu all the birds" aunl he
litlitfullv rrsriit tlir asrrtion. Mr. MiMahait arc ilie farmrr' aide of tlir
controversy and pkturrs. it a follows, in a Irttrr w"t t tlie Salem Capital
Jutirnal :
"I nmtrol a thousand ears !n this itnintv aitJ I have earnestly ttirj t
prryrf the canie. to male it frfiitfr, at rat. fr native crousr, nati
pheasants, native quail, llS White, and tome California quail I cot front thr
finite arnmision. One month ano, tlirv birds were numerous ami taitvr,
now there are none, exorpt an (a.asioiul highly nervous anj tuspiiioua China
pheasant anj two depleted bands of llb White. Every native grouse i
tHie, anj likewise the imported California quail anj the native pheasant.
"Two hoc have hern hot, one a brood ovv, worth $0. A stink Jo,
vv-oundrd ami mv neighbor' rristrrrd cow was lilted. A L-ate left
open and 300 head of boo escaped. It oust me over $20 tu get thetn h.k
Last year a hot for which I gave $JsO-ua t!ot anJ 1 had to kill him.
"I know that more than 250 bird have been Lilted on the plait this
M-an. I hae brrn able to kill jut two. Hut once ha my family had
mess of bird. Hie fellow who don't pay the taxes, don't own the animal
that hae been shot, the eates that were left open, got the bird all but two.
"Next prinj fw Kruuse will nuke tlie big timber ring with it challenge
nor will pheasant from nns covered log beat iw defiance to the breeze, ami
no quail will whistle chrrrily to me at I wander over the ranch. All are
jwie, lost in the ample bellie of those who can ee in a wild and beautifu!
bird only oniething to eat.
"And so I agree with the fellow who wid "the d d farmer." I.rf
u; damn all chumps and the farmer i certainlv the d t chump on earth.
L. H. Mc.MAHAN.
S
ECRETARIES McAtXX) AND REDFIELD are at present raisin
a terrific dust torm about a government-owned and operated mer
chant marine, but their dut i not stufticient by any mean to contuse
those who remember the fundamental facts. The present exhorbitant freight
late are due to the rik and delay of cargoes. Shipment designated for
neutral European port have generally ufiered and those consigned to the
ort of the allies have run the risk of being sunk and experienced delaxs
in unloading. '
The war will ometiine end and shipping conditions would again be
i.ornial. The government could not buy ship except at exhorbitant price.
The ale of the Pacific Mail hip illustrate tnis, although Secretary Red
f;rld has used this proof of profit in an attempt to bring out another point.
Americans were unable to make profits in foreign shipping before the
war began. Many of them floated foreign flags, to escape the harsh and
expensive provisions of our navigation law. All navigators agree that the
new navigation law, to become effective November 4, will increase the ex
pense. Most lawyer agree that the attempt to force foreign shippers to
comply whh the new seamen's act will be void. But if valid, American ships
would be driven out of business before the act became applicable to foreign
ships.
Our government-owned merchant marine would have to compete with
the world. Can it do it? Franklin D. Roosevelt, assistant secretary of the
naby, recently went into derails'as to why the operation and maintenance
of our navy cost more than other countries pav. Will not the same conditions
make a government-owned merchant marine cost more?. How will it com
tete. then, except at the expense of the taxpayer? Much is made of our lac
ot naval auxiliaries. Other governments acquire auxiliaries ds a condition
cf their subventions to shipowners. They find it cheaper than to attempt to
own and maintain them in time of peace. The loss on those acquired by
the United States in the Spanish-American war was less than the deficit
would be under the McAdoo scheme.
It is not proposed that the government invest enough in a merchant
marine to monopolize even American commerce. The favored ports served
would reap all the benefit, at expense in foreign vessels. It would be a burden
on the taxpayer and a discrimination against the great majority of shippers.
THE MATTER OF SUNDAY CLOSING is being brought before
the people of the stnte of Oregon at the present time with unusual
prominence. The fight between Portland grocerymen and those
interests which would close up every store has assumed more than purely
local interest, for if the Sunday closing law is upheld in Multnomah county,
every town and city in the state will be affected.
If the law is sustained, practically every place of business, excepting
theatres, hotels, drug stores and undertaking establishments, will be closed
on the first day of the week. But those who favor closing up the state on
Sunday, are not satisfied even with such regulation. They promise to put
before the voters at the next initiative election a measure which would close
up amusements as well as tho5e lines included in the statute which is
dispute in Portland.
Arguments against Sunday closing are many and sound, but it has
been the Ohio supreme court in a recent decision which discovered an entire
ly new reason why such measures are not just. The court's decision shows
that Sunday closing strikes at the very heart of religious freedom, of which
Americans boast so loudly. In an opinion by Supreme Judge Caldwell, of
Ohio, we read:
"It is the glory of our country that the right of belief in any particular
religious principle by legal enactment account thereof, is granted to every
one; but this principle can only be preserved by extending it equally to the
iinhrlinrr. Tit peiniciou anj turnout cuntequriiirt uf eiilotiing
irliioiu principle hy legal rn.utoirnt hve brrn hi wrl inird, uJ air w
iq'parrnt, that any drcition of the kind Uioiild not be rrgarJi-d.
Attempting to enforce the obfname ut the Sabbath by liw ala
ha and Ua will prodikr a phaiimYal and h)irriiitl tritaiir of
irligiiHit duly, and crratrt t tpitit of crowning bigoti), and rnd power
lolly to drtioy eveiy religioiu frrling of the hrit."
Suprrine Juitkv lliuiman of Ohio deviated:
"It i not nirre toleration that every individual haV heir in hi Mir
or diJvlirf. He frpow not iihul ihe tenancy of the government in lite
I.Kialitv of any clatt or vt nl men, but ilpon hit naiuial uiJiiraihlr
light of iniiHieike, which in (he Unguagr of the coiutiiMtioii, ate hetond
thr cixitiol or inieileieiHf of any human authority, The power to
nuke the law trtt in the Irgitlativr control mrr thing trin ul and not
over thing tpiriiual The general atM-mhly of (hij i not we
have hon, guardian of the uncity of any day. If it nut piotect ihe fmt
day uf (he wrrk from drwvration lraoK it i thr Chrnti.ui Sd'hath, it nuv
in like manner protect thr tixth day brvaur it it ihe holt J.it of the Mo
hauimedan, and thr trvrnth day hvaur it the Sabbath of ihr Jew and
Srvrnthday H.iplit, Nav, morr, it may ptotect thr Vri"U. tr.tiv.il dav
whiih. by tmr of ihe thurches, arr comidrird uarcrly e uiirJ than ihe
Sabbath day."
T
WO MEMBERS of thr Cl-ukama county court pa.-i a viit t"
Salem rrvrntlv.and invevted the tretch of hard i:t r lrul bv
Marion countv. Thr oh tA thr oiunty for llii pavement on a
iruOtrd rok bar wa a trillr u.idcr O.v cent per Miuarr .it J. iiKluduig a
rovalty of iTitt a yard paid to an aphalt company for the n of a plant.
Concert aphalt bird mrface lacing" niaterial wa laid upon the Manoii
txmnty toad to a ilepth of thrrr invhr uon a macadam or ciu.tird rk b.K.
Thr tuixrs of thr county to hr outh trrm unumal. Thrrr inch bard
ur!acr at 63 crnt whilr Multnomah county it paying 1.17 lor two inch
bitulithic i rnoiigh to makr any county in the state wonder. In piivr alonr,
bard turfovY i a rival of macadam at M crnt.
Hut no county thould be too eager to follow thr example of Marion
. .... i . .i
county. Iliesr roads near alrm havr ncrn down only a lew mourn. t
rral trt of thrir wearing qualitic ha not brrn madr. The county court
which havr vi.ited the stretch reprt that they appear to lie all right, but
pavement ran hot hr judgrd by thrir ability to tand ttaliic. rxanunr
those roads a yrar or two jrar from nowk to find if Marion county' road
building rntrrprisr ha brrn a uccrs.
Ihr difficult part of hard surface load construction is in mixing the
material. The temperature must be just right, the proportion rxact and
thr matrrial applied on the road at the proper heat. These exacting condi
tion for a good pavement require mm who thoroughly understand the work
for the success of the nd rests more upon then! than upon the quality of ma
terials. A county which desire to go into the road building businr must
first obtain a man who know how to mix and apply the niaterial.
Of course, the result of a durablr hard surface at 6.1 cents a yard would
be the elmination of macadam and gravel roads. A mile of hard surface,
14 feet w ide, would be only &650, or very little more than a Fod macadam
road. At uch a price Clackama county could atford to lav Ironi IU to U
miles a year and in a few year would have all the trunk highway in the
county equal to any such system in the state, Multnomah not excepted.
o
P
The Conservative Path
Our 34 years of banking experience
have convinced us that conservative
methods are always best best for the
bank and best for the people.
Without being too hidebound in our
dealings, we endeavor to follow the
conservative path and look for safety
before profit.
The Bank of Oregon City
THE OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
RESIDENT WILSON forced thr free sugar plank through con
gress, against the better judgment of Representative Underwood and
other Democratic leaders, and now it is Mr. Wilson who i leading
the fight to repeal the free sugar provision. Forced to a realization that no
l I I . . L I - .1.- .1 .t... .I.,... ... iwil
one has received me sligntest nenrrns irom me rroioi n m m.ii -,
that manv have bren injured, and that the revenues have bren reduced 40,
000,000 a year thereby, Mr. Wilson is now engaged in sounding out the
Democrats in omgress to determine if they will support him in an ettort to
replace that duty, or a part of it. 1
Alarmed by the prospect that the ende of the European war will result
in this country's being flooded with cheap product, against which the Uemo
cratic tariff bill will afford no protection, Secretary Redfield, by direction of
the president, ha sent out inquiries as to what step should be taken to
prevent "dumping" in these market. While the transient prosperity due
to war orders lasts, some people may forget that after the tmlerwood hill
passed and before the war, the United States Steel corporation, the Pennsy
vania railroad, the Baldwin Locomitive works and numerous other big in
dustries were laying off men weekly, but the Democrat in power realize
that fact and they dread the day when the end of the war shall place the
industries of this country at the mercy of untrammelled foreign competi
tion.
That is, Mr. Wilson and his close advisers dread it, although it i
highly improbable that after educating their colleagues in congress to an
opposite view they can now re-educate them to the new one. Only what
former Representative LongwTrth calls "high finance in the treasury de
partment" has served to conceal the lamentable failure of .Democratic reve
nue legislation, including, of oiurse, the tariff bill.
A Mr. Longworth points out, it has been only by
treasury statement" that the administration has been able to conceal the fact
that the 140,000,000 treasury balance of July 1, 1914, has shrunk to $20,.
000,000. ft it any wonder that, even at the expense of stultifying everything
he lias previously said and for which the Democratic party1 has stood, Presi
dent Wilson is telling his party leaders in congress that "something MUST
be done."
juggling the
T
HERE WAS A SAD ACCIDENT at Canbv the other day. A
mail clerk, instead of throwing a bag of mail from a northbound
Overland train, gave it a kick and it was caught beneath the wheels
of the train, carried several hundred feet and ground to bits. Adam rjnight,
county commissioner and ex-postmaster at Canby, and Assistant Station
Agent McCIure, of the Southern Pacific, gathered up the remains and at
a post mortem inquest found that the bag was filled with second class matter
and consisted of, for the most part, catalogues of mail order houses and
Sunday newspapers from a big city.
It would he a good thing for Clackamas county if every mail hag con
taining mail order "catalogues were ground to pieces beneath the wheels of
a train, rilled with attractive pictures and ottering imaginary Bargains
which the local merchant cannot hope to equal, the catalogue from the big
city store will take money away from the county every time, and the customer
in return is usually disappointed.
Any campaign, such as is being organized under the supervision of the
Live Wires, has a direct benefit for both the home merchant and the buyer.
To the first, it means more business; to the latter it means satisfaction or a
hasty and easy adjustment of grievances in case of dissatisfaction.
The Live Wire committee should not devote all their efforts to fighting
Portland trade, but should" show the general public the effect of mail order
trading as well. .
Many timrt load of gravel it (he pnprr timet would mv davi wolk I Ir
weeks later.
"'(lie roadt ihoulj rrxrive aunr proiettion and a more rfli4ir.1t iwr
1 i!on."
' !. IV ... I .1 . . . .
1 or nonerr na me mimi( i.lra. A imMrrn WaJ vlmuld I llr to
ind ihr traffic inqvotrj upon it, Thr thai Clkaniai county load
are not able lo pas tmh a let indicalri llat CUkanuv count) dor ntl
mid Ihe right kind of road. The editor of the Pioneer lu "rrn (anon
with four hour learnt ami unrranah!r od plowing tin the .lt load an
doing damage whiih w greater than ihr amount they weir ranting by ibeii
ur." If C1.kam County built teal roadi, no damage would have ken
done in Mich a mc and the farmrr could have haulrj hit load, rvrn iltotigli
'unreasonable with two Inttrad of four honrt.
n ..... ...
I nr r.ntor of the I ninrrr probably beginning to er ilie light. r i.
hrgutn.ng to realize that in the prevent mrthod, CUkama. county i. wasting
both the toad fund and the lime and rnrrgy of those compelled to tee the
toad. More protection and a more rffttient irrn of uipeivi.i.Ht air ihr
remedies urged by him, when the titir toluiion of ihr problem lie in 1 hanging
thr rutire ytrm from building temporary nudt to permanent mm-.
) . . ,
T IS DOUIiTFUI. if rvrr in thr hitory of this nation iheie ba ot
curird to disgraceful a proi reding at ihr drlihriatr ell.nt whih it being
madr by tin. administration lo trrmrir Vice-President Marshall into
violating hi oath of of lice at prrsiding officer of the United St.itr viutr.
At presiding officer, thr vice president it required to pirsi.le over thr
senate in exact accord with the existing rulrt, to do to impartially and
wilhout fear or favor, lie take a v.lnmi oath to do (hit and hr bat no d.s
creiion, he the rule gooj or bad. If they are bad it it ihe duty of the
senate to changr them. Nevrrthelrs. there are constant iiitim.it ions from
high official tourer that unlrst Mr. Marshall mi construct thr tenatr rule
at to favor thr prrsident and the few Dentin rat who vviih to establish
cloture in the tenatr. hr will not br irrmiited lo irtain his plae at Prr.ident
Wilson running male in 1916,
You will br rrnorninatrd if you will br good," is thr inr.sjgr being
convey to Air. .Marshall from authoritative toiitcr, while lir it given
clearly to understand that "bring good" will consist of violating hit oath
of office and construing the trnatr rule precisely at the president and a I it 1 1c-
band of Democratic senator t want him to.
"Cast honor to thr four w inds, repudiate vour minim oah and prostitute
your high officr and your poliiital ambition for a rrnomination will If
gratifird" i ihr message, combed in lest ei.phoniout terms, which Vite-
Prrsident Marshall is receiving almost daily from those who control itouiina
tion in the Democratic party.
I
s
protecting the roads from unreasonable traffic which d;:mage them
altogether out of proportion to the benefits derived by the parties using the
roads.
"Last winter there was aman using the roads west of town for heavy
traffic and destroyed them to such an extent that they were practically im
passible the rest of the season. The county could well have paid him more
than he made' by the use of the road, to have kept him off.
"Th is is a policy which no private concern would tolerate. When the
use of the road means practically its destruction it does seem that there
should be some way of protecting it'
"We have seen farmers with four horse teams and unreasonable loads
plowing up the soft roads and doing damage to them which was greater than
he total amount they were earning by their use,
"One of our gretaest sources of loss in road work is in our failing to
UFERAOE HAS NOT HEEDS' madr a party question, but partisan
politicians have oftrn trird to profit from it. Morr oftrn than not
thry havr failed in tint; and we regard the result of the recent uf
frage vote in New Jrrsry a a case in point. After dodging thr question for
morr than two yran, Prrsident Wilson with loud acclaim announced that
hr would vote willvthe suffragist in hi own state. Immediately hi political
undrrst rapper rt out to annrx thr suffrage issur anil to tir anothrr nalp
tj the president' none too plentiful string.
Mr. Wilson merely announced that he would support the suffrage
amendment. At once it termed taken for granted in tome quarter, that
thi sealed the success 'of the movement. The great man had spokrn, ihr
argument ran; what more remained to be said or done: Calmer minds
counselled continued effort, but even they thought the voters still to be under
the influence ol the presidential spell and that thr voir from the White
House would swing New Jersey strongly into line.
The suffrage amendment, however, was defeated by something
like 60,000 majority. It carried only one county, and that the smallest, in
the state; and it wa lost, by tremendous margins, in the president's own
precinct, city and county.
1'he moral seems to us obvious. It i that President Wilson has lost
a large measure of whatever public confidence he once commanded. Here
wa an issue, possessing undoubted merit, to which many thousand of sin-
vrre and high-minded men, women and newspapers have given ardent sup
port to an extent which warranted (hem in looking for victory even without
the president's aid. Yet it is defeated by overwhelming figures. Tlie con
clusion seems to us inevitable that the anti-suffrage vote in New Jersey wa
wollcn by the anti-Wilson sentiment which is known to exist there uml
which found in this year's special election an opportunity to express itself.
The president no longer speaksthecoinpelling voice of thi country. Time
was when, to congress and to other, he was a jewel eyed political Hudda
whose thunder-tone caused all the world to tremble and to obey. Now, it
is evident' that he is no omnipotent being, that to oppose him is neither
criminal nor treasonable, and that resistance to hi views is not to br visited
with instant death. Such a feeling is a highly contagious one. What
New Jersey has dared, with Mie suffrage, other communities will dare with
other iasues.
Mr. Wilson will he renominated, of course unles. lie takes counse
of prudence and make a grandstand play of declaring that he will abidr
by the one-term plank of the Haltimore platform. Hut he will enter the
.. V . ,. 1 1
campaign a sad v diminished figure from the majestic proportion in winch
his idolaters have sough't to make him appear. In hi own state he h:rs stead
ly shrunken. He secured fewer vote in 1912, for president, thai he did
in 1910, for governor. In 1914 his party elected only four congressmen, 111
against ten at the preceding election; while the Republicans regained control
of the legislature. In 1915, on an issue of his own making, we see the
outcome.
Ihe deduction is obvious. Mr. Wilson is no longer a real asset to any
party or to any cause; he is a liability. And yet he is all that the Democratic
party has to boast of.
0
Nowadays the fine fall weather is bringing a daily consignment of
Democratic politicians to Washington. They are postmasters, collectors of
customs, committee chairmen and what not., One of the first things they
do is to get interviewed in order that they may tell about "the president's
strength" in their communities. Then they go over to the White House
and show the paper to Tumulty, which is as near as they ever get to the
throne. Most of these prophets go the whole figure and predict Wilson':
re-election. But the wise ones confine their prognostications to the nonii
nation.
CASE TRIED BEFORE
. Ji OF TEN HEN
TWO JUROM MIITAKI INlTKUC
TIONt Or JUOOt CAMPBILL
TO GUANO JUIIV.
Th roll mil for 1 1 to by W V. UA
rla lnl iMIitld IMIi-y MoinUr
a tried la Hi drull niurt 'nr
Jttrr ot 19 l"rl
Tli iM""! I I J pin In
th Ihii. B'liii'lin 10 rnuUUori
When lli 1 mora Hun bill
roniiWl. Cliiull JuiIm rinpliell n
niHiiH l a aliurl rr"- In order 10 ilv
Imlrurtloiit lo lit grand Jurr lil'b
had )! brrn ilrn II told lh
rami Juror lo 10 born ami rturu at
lh rail of th court, but rivral of
lho dlllni In lh civil tlun oir
heard hi Instruction lo lh trauJ
furor and niUumlrtiKM tlnou and
Irtt lh bulldlna. All but lo ,r U
rlrd lint broil lit bii k.
The ronrt ronfroulrd altli h
l Hin-ni n4-itr of ilrln( a new
Jury and lrlnnlri all otrr attain, un
lit mix itt III Bllornoa dmlarrd Ibat
h aa llllnat lo try lb rata brtor
10 men. and lh nlhrr ldr lii
Jinlr riiiilx'll ry'rd lb Jury (lioiild
rurn It trrtllrl hrn right of lb
ten had rraehrd derUlon.
The venlli I of Ihr Jury for liiwl-
ley, lh dcfrlidanl. I loth lit at Ikitrr.
niHtr Handy, and lh t'r inwaled
by Ihidlry from Ihr ilw llon of Jutl
of lh i'rr I'linrll, bo iliil.lid for
til pUliitllf Thr stilt arrvr tint of a
hora trade
SAM CASE IS FREED
WIFE AND BROTHER GRttT AC
CUSED MAN At HI WALKS
FROM COUNTY JAIL.
AN INTERESTKD CITIZEN.
The Jitney Queitlon.
be liold for It. Doalilca tlio company In
Iohh H11I1I0 to bo cursed with drunken
driver. Wo aro convinced thattliore
Bliould be cIoho lmrmony between tlio
The Enterprlo.) Tlio Jitney (luentlon
luiH ltecn agitated over hIiico tlie "InHtl
tutlon" struck the town. It may be a
liune, or a blestilng. To any who llvo
on. one of the numcroim roads lending
to or from Oregon City It Is a delight
to ride out a nickle's worth rather
11 . ...11 .. .. 1 . .1 i.tn . ..
Till' Arrvr it r 1 Dinvrro 1 11 ' r. 1 inuii 10 ion miu Bwi-ui 111 uiu 1011 iui
-yOLALLA PIONEER contains the following editorial re- any ((itIim.0 ut fop onc are(l(y
marks: 'It seems unreasonable that there is no way of effectually tired from shopping with a dozen
nmfrn..:.... 1. 1 .. L LI . i I I l. hiinrtlna I f fttfirv in wolf tnr Miroo.
quarters of an hour for a jitney, and
then start out to walk with i heavy
load, affects not only nerves but tem
per as well. Having experienced this
more than once, the writer believes
there ought to be some sort of "regu
lation" of the Jltnny service.
Now the Jitney Is a necessity, rath
er than a luxury, and If there could
be stated trjps along all Important
roads, so that citizens could depend
upon them as they do on street cars
there would be fair pay to owners and
greta help to users.
We have very little sympathy with
Jitneys plying between Oregon' City
and Portland, since the street cars
,i r it' . .. . . ... i u'l7 uenmiiu ill mui one, mm ll
lake care of a road after its construction, until after it is entirely destroyed. they kill or mangle anybody they can
OREGON CITY, Nov . Editor of ; oty counclI Bnd jt ' d f
s.s Vfilviomln 1 Tltn tltuntt rt ttnai Inn ...
properly rnguliited they become a boon
to the community.
. A. H. MULKEY.
Pure Water Means Much, He 8fiy.
MOUNT PLEASANT, Nov. 1. (Edi
tor of The Enterprise.) I seo I.uwton
Heights Is culling for a water system.
This Is a call In the right direction
nnd we hope It will be loud enough
and enticing enough to be heard and
heeded. Water Is here in great plenty,
but produced ut much coHt und unless
reuchod at a grcut dopth and piped
will be more or less subject to surface
Impurities. Let the Mount Plensant
Improvement club get behind this
move and every citizen wishing the
community well got behind the club
and this thing can be realized.
Mamunl Caar, Indicted by lb irnd
Jury on a rhnrrte of murdering hi
brother, Krnrat Car. October 3,
rt'leawd under I r.mo bond from tlio
county JmII UVdneidar nUbl, rtaetty
0110 month after br abut bla brother
urr their home at rarkplacr. Ilond
ttrr a 1 1! n I'd by W. W. Mrre, Mr a
Sarah Kttrr. Kd. Johnaon and ('. ('.
I Ml Millar.
Mr. Cane and Ihr ai'cuard limn'
brother, Caaaltia Caar. grrrted Ham
aa b walked from Ihr county
Jnll. (ieornr ('. Ilmttnell, Bllornrjr for
Hani Cnae, Brrniiaed tint iHimla hlcb
weii apprvited.by Cln ult JihIk Cuiup-
111.
A t"( 1 1 Ion fur leller of ail m In list rat -
tion In lln fatal of Krnnat (', tin-
brother who wa killed, a (lied In
the probaln department of tbn roumy '
ounty Wrdnraday by hi tvhlnw, Mr.
l"on Cuae, through her attorney.
Dlinli k I'lmli k. Tho murdered man
left n ratnto valued at ITiOOU, ninalat
In K of both real and pemonal property.
Bi't'ordlng to tbn petition. Mr. Caar
and her daughter, Dorothy Caae, aged
on year, am the ortty heir named In
Ihe petition, Mr. Krnrat md Mr.
Sum Caao arr aialer.
STATE LEVY IS UNCHANGED
SAI.EM. Ore. Nov, 3-Thc ttlntu tat
levy will be about the iiimo for Itflt!
u for I9IS, according lo the alnle lax
('oiiiiiiIhhIoii. It is not believed tbnt
the levy will be larger. I-Uxt full the
levy fur 1915 wu fixed at $1,112,000.
a compared with $1,165,000 for (hu
year 1HM. und $1,12,0110 for Ihe year
191.1.
The Inenuullly between tho levy for
191.1 und ISM w'ns duo lo tho law gov.
ernlng when the 1913 levy wu mudo.
At thai tlmo was not possible tu nntli'l
pate expense of (be slate government.
A luw passed In 191.1 mudo It posslblo
eto anticipate expenditures, but It wu
niH'etmry to udjudlcate tho dlsrivpuii.
cIch of tho 1913 levy In tbnt of 1911.
Hereafter no such fluctuation will be
possible.
The actual amount of the 191(1 levy
wit not be known until about DcccihIht
1. This year It required about 3.2.
mills on tho tuxablo property of the
sluto.
Foley's Honey and
Tar Stops those
Night Coughs
TBej Are Weakening, and Diiturb the
Whole Family.
CLEVELAND, Ohio, Nov. 1 Illuncho
Walsh, noted actress of a few years
ago and more lutely vaudeville star,
Is dead here. 8he collapsed recently
at Youngstown, Ohio, having Insisted
on filling her engagement there before
she had completely recovered from an
appndldtl oprotlon.
Concha and enlila nnnatlf row smna at
nightfall. Kmp bottla of I'oi.M'a Hiinsi
ahd Tab l.onponND at hand.- Uaa It fril
than la nothing Id It that can pnanlbl; harm
yon. lint It elaara ths throat of phltn and
mnena, atopa the ooughln and tickling, and
haala th raw Inflamed aurfaosa.
OKO. D. COIII18, U.nr, L aarm "Mf wlfa
waa tronblad with a tarrlhlo wiuuh, and wa
enold gnt nothing to rslief her nntll I aakl
l)f. Ball of Homharli, who rnooramandml
Vol!' Tloif bt akd Tab io stronxlr that I
carchaied fjOs bottle. Ibifora tha
of thia bottla war naail, th onngh had an
tlraly dluppaared and hat health waa eom
pletaly rartorad."
rniLDE80RMEAn,8charTer,mcTh.,wrllai
"Laat wlntar I could not ileep at night oo as
coont of a bad eongb. It did not bothar ma
daring th daj.but atarted np at bedtime and
kept m from aleeplna. I waa Tery weak and
la bad ahap. I atarted nnlng Folbt' Honkt
AKD Tai and waa greatly pleaaad lo find that
the eooah left ma antlrel;, my apiietlt im
proved, and 1 alapt aonndly at night."
Qood drnggiau are glad to tell Folbt'
Bonbt ANDTABCOBroDHDheoaaaaltalwara
aatlaflaa tbe eoatomar and oontaioa nooplate.
iUfn robatltnU.
ivia t uaia i a phiind.
Jone Drug Co.
A