THE MORSISa OEEGOITAS, UGKtSkY, STAHGH 13. 1905. VISIT THE FAIR Sunday Crowd Enjoys the Sights, PLEASED ATTHE PROGRESS ' Many Surprised at Percentage 'of Completion. FORESTRY PALACE POPULAR Easterners Speculate as to Value of Logs in Mammoth Cabin, Sight seers Bet on Statues ' of Lewis and Clark. "Here Is the place to get your sou venirs of the Lewis and Clark Exposi tion." These are the words that em anated from a solitary faker who had established a stand immediately inside the main .entrance at the Fair grounds yesterday, and which greeted the ears of the sightseers who had braved the rather disagreeable weather and taken fn the Exposition. Each person that entered the gates served as the signal for a series of "barks" from the faker, who was determined to attract busi ness. After several hours of unfruit ful efforts to sell souvenirs, the faker opened a satchel of salted peanuts and candies. Still his prospective custom ers passed by him without notice. "I'll get you this Summer," mumbled the faker to himself, when a bunch of young people passed him the same as did all the others. "I guess I'm a. little premature and will have to wait sev eral months before I can hope to do any business. Why, do you know, I've been out here all day and haven't sold a thing," he remarked to a bystander. "Nobody will spend a cent now. They are soaking every tent they get to blow it in when the Fair opens. Then they will buy anything, just so it costs something. They won't care as long as they spend their money." So saying, the faker grabbed up his two heavy grips, bundled his coat around him and meandered out of the gate. He passed several fruit and candy stands, behind which the pro prietors were standing with a lone some and hungry air. "Don't be dis couraged, boys: it's coming. We'll get it, and lots of It, too. Don't you worry." The faker then took a car, and on his way to town lounged back in his seat and thought of the balmy days of the coming Summer and of the eager and expectant throngs of people he would Cot first shot at whqn they entered the Exposition gates. 'Til get mine." Tie whistled Involuntarily to himself as he swung oft the car on Washington street and started for his room. Forestry Building Popular. The Forestry building at the Exposi tion grounds still continues to be the chief center of attraction. The East erners are especially attracted to it. "If I had about 4000 of these back East," said a traveling man tapping one of the huge logs of the structure with his cane, "you would never catch me getting up In the early hours of the morn to catch a train. No, indeed. I'd be through for good." "How much do you suppose 4000 of those logs would be worthy ques tioned his companion. "I don't know, but there are enough there to fix me for life." The question as to how much one of the big logs was worth seemed to bother a lot of people. One man said the biggest log in the building put upon the market would bring at least $400. Needless to say, he was from one of the Eastern states, where the cottonwoods and oaks are the largest trees." Two young girls yesterday at the Exposition grounds wandered up to the Forestry building, under the alcove. "Let's get out of here quick," said one of the girls, real suddenly. "The build ing is not braced very well, and is liable to fall on us." Her companion actually ran out from under the build ing before she realised how ridiculous It was. She gazed up at the enormous timbers that supported the building and smiled. "A Kansas cyclone -couldn't hurt that building," she said. Civic Improvement Needed. The question of civic improvement has been so vividly impressed upon the minds of Portland peeple that it was even carried to the Exposition grounds yes terday. "We'll have to put President Wheelwright on the track of the Ex position officials," said a man, pointing to a pile of rubbish and debris that had accumulated along the temporary side walk. Many other comments of this nature were heard among the visitors. On man took a postal card and ad dressed it . to the Civic Improvement League of the Chamber of Commerce. On the card was a complaint because of a pile of boxes standing directly In side the main entrance of the grounds. This seemed to strike the man as very funny, because the Civic Improvement League probably owes Its existence to the Lewis and Clark Exposition. "Isn't this terrible," said a sympa thetic woman, who was examining a piece of statuary on which the paint had been worn oft. "The rain has ruined It It isn't a bit pretty now." She did not seem to realize that every thing would be given a fresh coat of paint before the Exposition opens. On a number of the ratlings and small ornamental buildings the paint has worn oft in places. This caused consid erable worry among a number of the visitors. Tho statues of Captains Lewis and Clark, which are located on the plaza overlooking Guild's Lake, offer a game of chance to the strangers who visit trie grounds. The statues are quite ' a distance apart, and as yet the names of each have not been placed upon them. Bets are made as to which statue is Captain Clark and which is Captain Lewis. One man lost $5 bet ting on Lewis yesterday. The guards are generally asked to decide the bets. FOR INDIAN SCHOOLS' EXHIBIT Additional Space of 900 Square Feet Secured in Agricultural Palace. CHEMAWA. Or.. March 12. (Special.) Assistant Superintendent Campbell. In passing through Portland Saturday, stopped over and secured from Colonel H. E- Dosch. director of exhibits Tor the Fair, an allotment of 900 square feet of space for an exhibit by the Indian schools of the State of Oregon. Tbo space allotted Is In tho gallery of the Agricultural building. Superintendent Chalcraft, of the Chemawa school, having charge of the Indian exhibit for the United States, -only received an allotment of 455 square feet in the Government building, and as nearly the entire St. Louis exhibit has been forwarded to Portland, the space was' totally inadequate for that alone. without being supplemented by exhibits from the Indian schools of the North west. The management of the Chemawa school conceived the idea of dividing the exhibit and having one representing the schools of Oregon, and this was the in tention in applying Tor tble apace. This will include. In addition to Che mawa, exhibits from Grand Bonde, Siletz, Yalnax. Klamath, Umatilla and the Warm Springs reservations and schools. The exhibit will be largely of an in dustrial character and will show the ad vancement of the Indian along Industrial lines wagon-making and blacksmithlng, carpentry and cabinetmaklng, harness and shoemaking. tailoring and drcsscnak ing. carpet weaving and basketry, house keeping and cooking and the other trades and Industries taught at the schools will be shown. , Both the general and the special ex hibits will be compact and selected from material that would All more than twice the space alloted. hence arr excellent showing is assured. PREPARE FOR THE CONGRESSES Commercial Club Planning for Enter tainment of Delegates. Two of the most Important conventions among the many great organizations which will hold their sessions in Port land this summer are the Trans-Mlssls-sippi Commercial Congress and the Na tional Irrigation Congress. The date of these two great gatherings has not as yet been determined, and it is for the purpose of deciding this and other details relative to advance corre spondence, entertainment of delegates and other incidents connected with these conventions that a meeting has been called by a joint committee for Wednes day evening, at 8 o'clock, at the rooms of the Portland Commercial Club. It Is already known, however, that one of these conventions will immediately follow the other, giving the hundreds of delegates who may be interested in the proceedings of both an opportunity to participate in their sessions without making an extra trip to Portland. Pleased -With Courtesies Received. BOISE, Idaho. March 1 (Special.) Exposition Commissioner S. R. W. Mc Brlde and ex-Commissioner C. B. Hurtt have returned from Portland, where they went to select a site for the Idaho build ing. They express themselves as being much pleased with the attention accorded them by the Exposition officials. President Goode and Director of Works Huber accompanied them on their tour of inspection, and when the selection had been made these officials stated they would do anything possible for Idaho. An In spection of the Idaho exhibits shipped to St. Louis showed the Exposition officials had taken splendid care of them. Mr. McBrlde states the treatment they received was in strong contrast to that which they met In St. Louis. THIEF CAUGHT AFTER CHASE Neighbors Pursue and Capture Man Who Had Ransacked Residence. Charles Weston does not appreciate the kindness of fate. If he did he would take a different view of things. He would argue that If he had not strayed into the house of A. Boutledge, at 555 Gllsan street, and purloined the rings he would not have been chased over the entire country and at last captured and put in jail, where he can have a chance to re cover from the "dope habit," But he takes another viewpoint and looks un kindly on the agility of Mr. Boutledge and curses the. chance that brings him face to face with a charge of burglary. At any rate, he has the satisfaction of having given the neighborhood a run for the money of Mr. Routledge. Weston is a man of the species that looks with kindly and entreating eye -upon the pleasures of the seductive "hop." The pleasures mentioned have taken from him his flesh, the brightness of his eye and his conscience, but have left a won derful agility when the City Jail stares him In the face. Yesterday afternoon the young son of Alexander Boutledge, the president of the Portland Oyster Company, went home from the office to look for the top to a bicycle lantern and heard Borne one walk ing about In the rooms overhead. Just as the boy started to run back to the office and give the alarm to his parents the man jumped out of a bedroom window and ran up the street. Unluckily he ran toward the office, and hearing the breath less Btory of the child the family started In pursuit on wheels and on foot. Mr. Boutledge and a son formed the advance guard of the infantry column pursuing, while the rest of the attacking squadron was made up of a rapidly ac cumulating band of neighbors. Weston by this time was getting into his stride and spurned the ground with flying feet. He scaled back fences, dodged Into basements and skipped around houses until Mr. Boutledge, who is out of practice, began to lose breath and hope, not to mention various portions of his apparel, left on the fences surmounted in his chase. At the end of a race of several blocks the thief ran on a porch on Hoyt street, where, by a superhuman effort, his pursuer overtook him, and as the culprit was about to jump to- the ground, caught him by the collar, where he held him suspended and wriggling. In this picturesque tableaux the pair was found by Officer Wendorf, who had come from the station with the patrol. Weston thoroughly ransacked the Bout ledge house and made away with two rings and a small quantity of change, which he found. He threw the rings away in his flight, but the money was tanen from him at the Police Station. He Is being held for a hearing on a charge of burglary, preferred by Mr. Boutledge. THE PHRASEOLOGY STORK. How It Brought a Famous Saying About Missouri. PORTLAND, March 10. (To the Editor.) In reply to an inquiry throush your col umns as to the origin of, Tm from Mis souri." I will say that It Is based on the following1 Incident: A party of men were seated In a hotel In a Western city discussing different subjects as they presented them selves. Finally the subject of naUvltv cama 'tip, and it was agreed that each one pres ent snouia ieii rrora wnot state at came. One came from Pennsylvania, another from Ohio, another from Ionic and so on until more than a doten states had been named. One fellow was seated behind the stove away from the crowd, and he seemed en tirely disinterested. He wore a slouch hat. had his pants tucked into the tops of bis boots and the crop of alfalfa that he. wore on his hln looked as If it had been Irri gated from the tall-race of an Iron ore washer. ITe had taken no part In the dis cussion. When It came to him he sat sll.nt and morose. After considerable Insist ence on the part of those In the bar-room be arose fcUllenly and. drawing a big six shooter from his belt and leveling It at the crowd, said: "I'm from Missouri; now, damn you, laugh." It Is needless to add that nobody laughed until the man from the state of Old Joe Bowers had disappeared. E. S. GARVER. Strange Ending cf Concert. London Chronicle. In the middle of a charity concert at Datchet-on-Thames on Tuesday night the accompanist, mistaking his cue, struck up 'God Save the King." Before any one of the performers realized what had baji pened, the hall was empty, the audience having gone home with the Idea that the concert was over. As a consequence comic singers and ballad vocalists, soma of whom had traveled long distances to ren der their services, could not give their turns, and yesterday the organizers of the concert were walking about the village apologizing to everybody. GRAXBLATED EYELIDS. Murine Eye Remedy cures this and ether "Eya troubles, mxe weak eyes strong. UNSIGHTLY FAIR WILL BENEFIT After-Effect Not, Feared by Tom Richardson. BUSINESS BLOCKS NEEDED Manager of Commercial Club Regards Hostelries Necessary, and Says Exposition Will Be Making of Portland and Oregon. "I have been more than pleased," said Manager Tom Richardson, of the Port land Commercial Club, "In noting that all seem to agree that Portland will be benefited as a result of the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition. It Is grati fying to see that almost everyone now seems a unit In the belief that building operations after the Fair will be even larger than at present. Colonel Dosch's optimistic opinion as an exposition ev pert, given in the Sunday Issue of The Oregonlan of February 26, was especially valuable. "A little retrospective view as regards expositions and their Influence upon the growth of cities Is interesting at this time, for unfortunately there are a vast number of people who have gotten It into their heads for some reason or other that expositions have been a detriment rather than a benefit to the deles in which they have been held. "Thia opinion gained a foothold as a result of .the Chicago Exposition. The people of the entire country, but espe cially those of the lake metropolis, got the impression that all that would be necessary for them to make a fortune was to get a building in Chicago, par ticularly In the vicinity of the Columbian Exposition. Great hotels, apartment houses, boarding and rooming houses of every description, and business blocks actually covered many square miles In the neighborhood of the grounds. Many of the hotels near the principal entrances were never occupied, some still in course of construction during the earlier days of the- Fair were never finished. It was a city within Itself, and within ten days after the Exposition had opened, thou sands of people realized that their In vestments were not worth SO cents on the dollar. "The railroad men of the country fig ured out an enormous attendance; the people of Chicago were certain that they would entertain more people than were ever gathered together In any city in the world, and It was thought that almost all the people of the United States and Can ada, with a million or so from Mexico,' European and other foreign countries, would attend the Exposition. Prices of real estate went sky-high, and while the Exposition was a great success. It was a disappointment in many ways. Followed by Hard Times. "Then it was followed by a year of hard times that was only equaled dur ing the last half of the nineteenth cen tury In 1SS7 and 1S72. The year after the Chicago Exposition I sood In front of Marshall Field's great retail store on State street, it was during the month of August and In the middle of the after noon, and for an Instant of time there was not a single vehicle on 400 feet, or an entire block of State street, which Is usually the busiest thoroughfare in Amer ica, especially from Congress street to tho Temple. But then times were hard all over the "United States and people, of course, said that & great deal of it was due, both In Chicago and In other sec tions, to the great Exposition. "Now the Chicago Exposition Is the only instance in this country that was followed by depression, and of course the Exposition had nothing to do with that. The Omaha Exposition was a financial success and it had a great deal to do with the placing of Omaha on the map as a live, up-to-date and enterprising modern city. Omaha had the misfor tune in ISM to have some slelght-of-hand enumerators, and through their legerde main tho city was shown to be almost twice as large as it really was, exceed ing Kansas City In population, and then In 1900, after Omaha had enjoyed ten years of at least moderate growth, she apparently had decreased In population, and her successful Exposition got the credit for a matter with which it had nothing to do. Why Omaha Fair Failed. "Certain parties In Omaha attempted to run the Exposition a second year be cause it had been a success, and the fact of this second year being a failure has been associated by many people with the Exposition proper. "The Exposition at Atlanta was of vast benefit to the Georgia .metropolis, and. by the war. there are few better built cities in this country or Europe than Atlanta. "The Pan American. Exposition a't Buf falo should never have been held. When people from anywhere as far West as In diana or as far South as Kentucky got to Buffalo, It a? as only a night's run -to BILLBOARDS AND SHACKS GREET THE EYES OF NEWLY ARRIVED TOURISTS LOOKING EAST OX AXKENTl STREET ERO.M FIFTH. New York, and they were not going to waste any time In the metropolis of West ern New York, when they could run down to the mertopolls of the Nation In fact, their stays at the Exposition were very brlof. The people of Philadelphia, Wash ington and New York City didn't attend at all. Buffalo suffered no bad results from the Exposition, but the people of the city never really got interested in It. "Now. In regard to the Louisiana Pur chase Exposition at St. Louis, the people of the 'Mound City have already forgot ten that they had an exposition, and they are going after business and are building new buildings Just as though nothing un usual bad occurred In their midst last year. "St. Louis today has no more hotels than she needs in the ordinary business of the city. The same Is true of Buffalo and Atlanta. Chicago tore down her tem porary structures, and the part of the city devoted to the Exposition Is now its most beautiful and exclusive residence district, and the Fair Is seldom referred to. Not Too Many Hotels. "I have yet to meet the man or woman In Portland who thinks we have too large hotel or rooming-house capacity, and that Is the only feature in which the city could possibly be Injured from a real estate or Investment standpoint, "I don't think I heard the Exposition at New Orleans referred to a dozen times during my residence In that city, but it was of great benefit-Its most Important effect was the bringing of the business In terests of the North and South together. "There is little or no use In discussing Nashville. Charleston or other points. In a way I have been associated with all of these expositions. At Omaha. Texas made a very good presentation, and It was handled by a group of us, I don't suppose more than 20 people were really Interested. I was vice-president from Texas at the Pan American Exposition at Buffalo, but the state wasn't Interested in even a remote way. In fact, the people of Texas paid no more attention to the Exposition than did those of New York City. "I would very much appreciate any good reason why Portland should suffer In even the slightest degree as a result of the Lewis and Clark Exposition. Our chief development andadvancement has been in the way of home-bulldlng I am In formed that 75 per cent of the money that has gone Into residences and flats is being placed by people who are building their own homes. In some sections of the city every building In course of construction Is being erected as a home. "The only relation the Lewis and Clark Exposition has to the future of Portland Is that through It as a vehicle many thou sands of men and women will become more familiar with this city. The resident of Portland who argues that the Fair will injure the city forgets the superior loca tion of Portland from both, a business and residence standpoint. Business Blocks -Needed. "If Portland capital would begin at once the erection of several modern, fireproof office and business buildings, so that our visitors would see that the people of Port land have confidence In Its future, every dollar Invested would not only pay hand some returns, but would bring enormous returns In the future. "To sustain a population Increasing with the rapidity of Portland. Oregqn and the Pacific Northwest, great Industrial institutions must be established, as this is the only avenue through which surplus labor can be employed. Will Be Beneficial. "The business men of the country will come here to rest a little while, not to stop one day at a hotel, see some custom er here and then get out on the first train, but the residence district.' the manufac turing district, as well as the Fair, will be thoroughly looked over, and I am con vinced that this will be beneficial to Port land. "The magnificent attractions of the Co lumbia Blver are already fairly well known, but as a result of the Fair to see this Incomparable stream, and Its wonder ful scenery will become a necessity. The three new things that will live as a result of the Exposition are. first, the superb, drinking water enjoyed by the people of Portland; the marvelous Portland Heights trolley ride, which has no parallel any where In tho world, and the Forestry building. "The glorious Summer climate of the Pacific Northwest will be experienced by hundreds of thousands of people, many of whom will be able to build Summer homes for the future, and certainly no other city in the world offers as many attractive sites for such "buildings as does Portland." WANT TO SHARE THE PROFITS Street-6ar Operators Will Ask for In crease During Exposition. To have a bigger share in the 'increased, profits of the street car companies during the Fair, a request is to be made by car operators of all kinds for an additional live cents an hour during that time. A petition is now being signed by the em ployes of the Portland Consolidated to be presented when a sufficient number of names are added to It. The increase asked, for will amount to 20 per cent or over, as the maximum price paid operators Is 25 cents an hour for three-year men. F. I. Fuller,, general manager of the Portland Consolidated, refused to make & statement about the matter yesterday, saying that no petition had been prwentHL. EAST SIDE IS BUSY Buildings. Being Erected Every Locality. in HOMES UNDER CONSTRUCTION Many Business Blocks Are Being Put Up in St. Johns, While Other Suburbs Point With Pride to Many New Dwellings. It is estimated that above 1500 houses are being built on the East Side, includ ing those under. way in the suburbs, averaging in cost about $1500 each, the more pretentious costing as high as $10,000. Scattered over so wide an extent of territory is the building area that only a personal investigation shows the extent of the building movement. On Holladay avenue and northward there Is a group of new buildings and foun dations for others that will cost $50,000. Between Morris street and Woodlawn and St. Johns, along the Peninsula, 37S new houses were counted last week, at St. Johns, half a dozen business houses are under way, besides small cottages almost without number. Along Willam ette Boulevard, overlooking the Wil lamette Biver, the territory la being covered with cozy homes. This is par ticularly true on the bluff above the Peninsular Lumber Company's milL In anticipation of the big Fair, houses are being built In bunches. Four cot tages, costing $14,000, are being built for H. E. Stemler at Union avenue and Fargo street. About the new car barn of tne Portland Consolidated 24 dwell ings are being put up. John Davidson Is putting up three double houses on East Third street and Holladay ave nue that will cost about $5000 each. J. W. Parrlsh and A. Gouley have Invest ed In property near the east end of the Steel bridge. Theyv own half a block on East Second and Hassalo streets and another half block on Third be tween Wasco and Multnomah streets, which they will cover with dwellings costing on an average of $3000 each, so their investment will run above $50. 000. On the Ladd tract and along Haw thorne avenue a fine type of dwelling la being put up. Here Whitney L., Boise Is putting up a residence that will cost about $10,000 and there are others that will cost upwards of $5000. To the south of Sellwood It is the same story of new dwellings everywhere. Also out to Lents and Montavilla the building movement for the Spring is fairly under way. It is estimated that In dwellings of all kinds $2,000,000 is now being ex pended on what are under way, and it may be said that the Spring building is hardly started. Large Sand Dock and- Bunkers. In the larger structures much is do ing and more is promised. NIckum & Kelly are spending $16,000 on their dock and sand bunkers at the foot of East Washington street on the site of the old Standard Box Factory. H. C Campbell, Joseph Supple and others will start work on a large fac tory building on East Water and Bel mont street, for tha purpose of manu facturing rotary engines, a plant that will cost; with the machinery, about $10,000. At the east end of the Steel bridge. Cord Sengstake Is erecting a $15,000 two-story frame building.' The first floor is occupied by five storerooms and on the second floor aro flats.- Wil liam Cox is also erecting a $10,000 structure at the end of the bridge for stores and apartments. On Union ave nue ground has been broken for a two story brick for Edward Sharkey for enlargement of his factory, and on Grand avenue work on the foundation of the two-story brick for Albert Heintz is being completed. Hotel for Sellwood. At Sellwood work wil be started this Spring on a $10,000 hotel, for D. M. Don&ugh, John W. Campbell and others, for building which a stock company has been formed. The building will stand on Umatilla avenue, near the cor ner of East Thirteenth street. Plans for a convenient and attractive building have been drawn up. Work Is progressing on the resort at "The Oaks," near Sellwood, where, it Is said, $100,000 will be expended In dredg ing and filling and erecting buildings. At Caxadero work on the O. W. P. power plant la going aheaL This week the contractor commenced building a bridge across tbo Clackamas two miles above the site- of the big dam. to fa cilitate the transportation of material in the construction of the plant. Soma idea of the magnitude of this enterprise may be had .when, it is stated tha res ervoir "below tha dam will costal acres, and that the total cost of the completed plant will be upwards of $1,030,000. WANT BETTER TRADT SERVICE Growth of Newberg and Dalla.3 De mands Facilities. POBTLAND, March 1L (To the Edi tor.) Having organized and built, and aitcrwaros ror two years operated, as manager, the Portland and Yamhill divi sion (now leased to the Southern Pacific). 85 miles. I am asked by many citizens along this line of "railway to address The Oregonlan in their behalf, and point out the reasonableness of their request for Increased train service. Seventeen years ago, when I operated that line, the train service was about the same thereon as it Is now, yet the population along the road has since not only more than dou bled, but the freight traffic has increased 300 per cent. Towns all along that terri tory have Increased in population in sim ilar proportions, except La Fayette. For instance. Newberg. when wo first built to it (against considerable opposition from the Oregon & California Ballroad), had only a few straggling bouses with less than 100 people, now over 2000 popula tion, and with its neighboring suburb of Dundee, together command over S00O pop ulation, and compose the largest fruit producing district of Oregon, from which more carloads of freight are now hauled Into and through. Portland to Western towns than other fruit points on the Southern Pacific's lines In Oregon. So with Dallas, whose county seat was only saved to It by railroad connection; it has Increased 360 per cent In population of its district. Do we then wonder why trolley lines are being projected to Invade the terri tory already occupied by the Southern Pacific? Simply because of inadequate train service, and what makes the ques tion more economical to the 3outhern Pa cific to operate Is tho fact that this Yam hill division is 12 to 12& miles shorter than their West Side road. Strange to Bay, when branch lines in the Interior do not wish to compete with the South ern Pacific, but co-operate with it, and ask for traffic connections, the New York management fights and opposes the same In the State Legislature, and the right to compel the loaded cars to be hauled by the Southern Pacific Company Into Port land, and in such opposition were sup ported by 16 Representatives and Sen ators from Multnomah County. WILLIAM BEXD. Gorky at the Show. London Chronicle. Anecdotes of Maxim Gorky are on the wing. Here is one they tell In Paris. He went to the theater at Moscow, one eve ning to see a play by a popular writer. Instead of paying attention to the stage, the entire audience rose and greeted Gor ky with, prodigious acclamation. Then he delivered this address: "What on earth are you staring at me for? I am not a dancing girl, nor the Venus of Milo, nor a drunkard Just picked out of the river? I write Btorles; they have the luck to please you, and I am glad of it. But that is no reason why you should keep on staring. We have come here to see a charming play. Be good enough to attend to that, and leave me alone." More de lighted than ever, the audience shouted with joy. Perhaps they thought they would get another speech, but Gorky jumped out of his seat and left the thea ter in disgust I You walk with ner, you roc& ner, you give her sugar, you try all kinds of things 2 But she coughs all through the long night, just the same ! No need spending another night this way. Just a dose or two of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral will soothe the throat, quiet the cough, insure a good night's rest. Ask your doctor about the wisdom of your keeping tins remedy in the house, ready for these night coughs of the children. Doctors have the formula. They know all about this medicine, ATJK'ft ZASt TOMft-Tftr the teir. ATX&'S KXX-7ar mwtWttw AXraUJM4FJJflbXA-?trhlC. ATMt'S JU&mt CW lcai tM. f BOOKS ARE TO OPEN Registration for Voters Begins Next Wednesday. CLERKS READY FOR THE RUSH County Clerk Fields Prepares to Reg. ister Party Affiliation of 20,000 Voters Within 30 Days-Tells ' Who Must Register. To enable Republican and Democratic voters to participate in the primary nomi nating elections of May 6, County Clerk Fields will reopen the registration books next Wednesday for a period of 30 days, so that they may record tho party affil iation in accordance with the direct pri mary law, which permits only those elec tors registered as to their party affinity to take part in primaries. Mr. Fields has books and clerks all ready for a big rush and expects to be kept very busy. The registration made last Spring contained names of 21,000 city clectora who drifted to tho County Clerk's office through a period of four months and a half, between January 4 and May 15. All but perhaps 2000. whom the re turns of the June election show as hav ing voted the Prohibition and Socialist tickets, must be registered again If they would vote at the primaries, since none registered his party affiliation last Sprlnc. Bnt this time only 30 days are allowed by law for registering. If electors shall register wfth as much alacrity as last year tha County Clerk will be visited by an estimated host of 20.000. "We can receive them all," said Mr. Fields yesterday, "If 'they will come early and not crowd one another out. at the wind-up." V About SCO electors who registered their party membership last Fall will not reg ister this time. Who May Register? Those to whom the registration books will be open are: First Those who registered last Spring but did not record their party affiliation. Second Those who have changed 'their residence s'.nce last registering. Third Those who have not registered heretofore. Fourth Newcomers who shall hava lived In the city six months at the time of the election or primaries. The first group need not register again to vote at the election June 5; only to vote at the primaries. - The second, third and fourth groups must register again to participate in either the primaries or the election. Petitions Await Registration. Until the new registration has got un der way primary petitions will not b circulated because signers must be reg istered as to their party affinity if they attach their names to such documents. Aspirants for office will be placed on primary ballots as candidates for their party nomination, if their petitions con tain two per cent of the party vote cast last June for Representative In Congress which for. Republican aspirants neces sitates IDS signers and for Democratic 67, If the goal be an office of the city at large. Accordingly few gentlemen who hunger for office will be brought before the foot lights for a week or two perhaps. .Potato Growing Overdone. PORTLAND, "March U.-i(To the-"' Ed-' itor.) No doubt during tho coming sea son a large percentage of the farmers will plant another largo crop of potatoes, to be again disappointed, as the days of the high-priced potato are practically over. Each year sees a larger potato area in Oregon. More land is being used for the purpose of potato-growing than ever before, and now Colorado Is clamoring to market her huge surplus crop both here t and in California. Now, if the above be facts, why don't the farmers turn their efforts for a while to something more profitable? Take, for example, car rots, turnips, beets and cucumbers. The latter are always in big demand. Tha pickle factories are always unable to se cure the required amount, and at the average price paid one acre of cucumbers will bring nearly fourfold in price mora than if planted in potatoes, besides re quiring very little extra labor in the culti vation. Carrots always bring good re turns, and are always in demand. Cab bage never goes begging. No farmer need be afraid to bring to market his cabbages if -well grown, as the Oregon product Is much, more in demand than the California product. There are numerous other veg etables that, if properly cultivated, will yield better returns than the potato. S. G. At Work on Educational Exhibit. HOOD RIVER, Or., March 12. (Special.) County School Superintendent Neft has been inspecting the work of the Hood: River schools being prepared for the edu cational exhibit at tho Lewis and Clark Fair, and states "that the pupils will ba able to make a very good display. The meeting of the Wasco County Principal's Club at the rooms of the Hood River High School Saturday was well attended, and several able addresses were delivered by teachers of the valley schools. "What kind of a chap Is' net" "Oh, one of the ort that will lie when tha truth would do jcat aa vrell'-yPuck. 1 i II' ' I nTTIIIMIIIIIIIII I IIIIIM