THE MORNING OREGONIAX. MOXDA1V JANUARY 20, 1913. 10 ACTION ON VETOED BILLS IS IN DOUBT Lower House Will Be in the Limelight During the Present Week. ENMITY IS NOT INDICATED Majority Seemingly Assume Attitude That Measures Should Be Con sidered on Merits Disposi tion May Come Late. STATE CAPITOI Salem, Or., Jan. 19. (Special.) What will happen to the Governor s vetoed bills Is a ques tlon which will throw the House of Representatives more or less Into tne limelight this week. The Senate is now up with its end on the bills and has forwarded to he House sucn or inose bills that received the necessary two thirds to carry them notwithstanding the veto of the Governor. So far the House has passed no ve toed bills. It still has the Senate bills in its possession without having acted on them, and as far as Is known the special committee of the House on vetoed bills has taken no action as to what 'report It will make on the last batch of the bills that has been sent over from the Senate. Personal Enmity Not Seen. When the House turned down the re port of the special committee on two of the House bills that were vetoed, and t..e committee retreated with the balance of Its reports for further con sideration, it added a touch which has developed Interest as to just what the House will do and what the committee will do when these reports are ready to come up again for consideration. It has been the opinion of a number of the members, who have been ob serving conditions In the House, that that body Is not concerning itself with the Governor or his vetoes. An occa? slonal flash from a member or two has Indicated a slightly Inimical atti tude, but on the whole the House seems to be assuming the position that the veto measures should be considered on their merits. As a result It has not been taken that the failure to pass the two House bills over the head of the Governor Is particularly indicative that the Governor is playing a strong hand In that body, neither is it con sidered on the other hand that the majority or any particularly heavy col lection of the Representatives have personal enmity to take out on West or his programme. Long Debates In Disfavor. Consequently It Is asserted by mem bers who have been watching affairs in the lower House that the sustain ing of the two bills need not be con sidered as a criterion as to what will happen to the balance of the bills. Making the record that It has for its first week of business a number of House members are Inclined to dodge away from any lengthy debates or dis putes on questions which are outside of pushing through required legisla tion, and they hope to continue this record for the balance of the session. As a result there may be an effort to squelch any long continued debates on the vetoed bills as well as an effort to push them through with a vote as fast as possible. It is probable that the Senate bills which have been sent to the House will be the last batch of vetoed bills to be considered by that body, as there seems to be a disposition to await the action of the Senate on the vetoed bills of the House before the House finally acts On the vetoed bills of the Senate. Consequently final action on ,the two Wood bills, which proved the' feature of last week in the Senate, may be de ferred for several days. MILLAGE BILL IS IX MAKIXG Krfort Being Made to Supply In come for State Colleges. STATE CAPITOL. Salem. Or.. Jan. 19. (Special.) Calling for two boards of regents instead of one. but to provide for a mtllage tax for the support of the University of Oregon and the Ore gon Agricultural College, a bill is now in the course of preparation. The bill which went before the peo ple in 1913 provided that both of the schools be placed under the control of one Board of Regents. At present there are two Boards of Regents, and that portion of the bill doing away with one of the Boards met with consider able opposition. It Is on this assumption that those who are preparing the millage bill be lieve it should go before the Legislature in an effort to place the two schools strictly on a millage basts. At pres ent each of the schools has an annual maintenance appropriation, and efforts will be made at this session to have this maintenance appropriation in creased, and demands will come in as well for further appropriations for buildings and Improvements. These Increases, some of the members say. are certain to be asked for from time to time as long as the schools are finan cially regulated as they are now, and for that reason efforts will be made to push through the millage tax bill. WOKKMEX'S ACT DRAWS MAXY ' Joint Committee to Hear Sugges ' tlons on Compensation Bill. STATE CAPITOL, Salem. Or, Jan. 19. (Special.) Tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock, in the Supreme Court rooms, one of the liveliest committee meet ings of the session is promised. The Joint committee on Industries from the House and the Senate will listen to arguments for and against the proposed workmen's compensation act. Numer ous labor leaders of the state, as well as others, will be on hand to offer tuggestiona as to the proposed bill. It now seems doubtful if the hearing, which has been set for that day, can be completed Monday, and it may be necessary for It to go over for perhaps i number of days. Junket Trip Opposed. STATE CAPITOL. Salem, Or, Jan. 19. (Special.) Senator Lester, of Clatsop County, will probably oppose the adop tion of a resolution Introduced by Far rell of Multnomah, providing for a junketing trip to Washington to dis cuss with a similar committee of the Washington Legislature the question of fishing laws on the Columbia Klver, provided that resolution Is reported out favorably. Senator Lester states that, while the present laws are possibly not altogether satisfactory, he believed they re as satisfactory as they could be made, and that the junket would be jseless. Election Law May Be Changed. STATE CAPITOL. Salem. Or., Jan. 19. (Special.) To amend the present law regulating the time of changing elec tion precincts is the object of & bill which Senator Dimick, of Clackamas, Is preparing. The bill may be intro duced in the House. At the present time election precincts are changed lb July. Under the proposed bill they will be changed in December. The reason for this change is found in the dif ficulties experienced by County Clerks when time for registration arrives. Registration books open in January, but with election precincts changed in July the registration as to precincts Is disturbed and broken In tne miuaie of the year, resulting in considerable confusion, it is stated. EIGHT-HOCK BILL CORRECTED Senator Smith Prepares Duplicate With Enacting Clause. STATE CAPITOI Salem, Or., Jan. 19. (Special.) To correct an error which was - made in one of the bills passed by the people at the general election In 1912. Senator Smith, of Coos and Curry, has prepared an eight-hour bill to go before the legislative body. The bill which was passed at the last general election providing for an eight-hour day for all employes on contracts on public works was given a large majority but failed to carry the proper enacting clause. Attorney General Crawford held that it was necessary for the enacting clause to appear on initiative measures as wen as on measures passed by the Legis lative Assembly. and consequently stated the act was invalid. Senator Smith's bill Is a duplicate of the eight-hour law, but carries the necessary enacting clause. BOOK BILL DUE TODAY MEASURE TO BE INTRODUCED BE SENATOR MILLER. Change in Present Text Book Law Is Favored, but Bill Offered 3iay Be Slightly Amended. STATE CAPITOL, Salem, Or.. Jan. 19. (Special.) Senator Miller, of Linn, tomorrow will Introduce the bill pro viding for a change In the state text book law. This will probably come with the indorsement of the State Board of Education, or at least with out its opposition. The bill has been examined by the members of that commission, and is largely along the lines suggested by Superintendent Alderman. In a nutshell, the principal change provided is to alter the present plan of changing the entire list of tej.t TTooks used In the schools once In six years by providing that a change of a certain part of the list be made every two years. Under that plan each group of text books would be changed every six years, and not the entire number of them at any one time. It is urged In favor of this idea that the expense of the present plan Is extra burdensome on the students. Making the entire change at once sweeps away all of the student's text books and requires him to secure an entire new supply. In addition. It Is stated, that when the entire change is; made at one time that it Is practically impossible for the books to be secured for ready use. Senator Miller expressed himself as not altogether pleased with the details of the plan as outlined In the bill, but as to the main idea he expresses him self as favorable. He may urge some amendments after the bill gets Into committee. He believes there are cer tain classes of school books that should not be changed as often as six years. As an example he cites an arithmetic and a spelling book. He believes that books of this kind could be kept in constant use for much longer than six years without any detriment to the student. He states, however, that the present system, in his mind, should be changed, owing to the question of expense and the difficulty In securing a proper dis tribution of books. SALMON CONSERVATION AIM Petition to Close Sluslaw River to Fishermen Given Little Support. FLORENCE. Or, Jan. 19. (Special.) Petitions which are. being circulated asking that the Sluslaw River be closed to commercial fishing lor a term or five years are receiving very small support in this section and the Lower Siuslaw Valley. The size of the salmon pack of re cent years Indicates a steady Increase. For the years 1887 to 1899 Inclusive the total pack of salmon 'on the Slu slaw approximated 121.3S9 cases, while for 'the years of 1900 to iis inclusive the pack totalled 132.268. These figures do not include the ftsb salted or the large numbers taken out by the fish wagons and otherwise hauled out over the stage road during the past seven or eight years. The 1911 pack was 13.5o5 cases ana the 1912 pack 13,2o0 cases. Boats on the upper river did not make as large catches this year as In some seasons, owing to the Increased number of boats In the lower river. SIDELIGHTS SENATOR DIMICK had introduced a resolution providing that no bills be introduced after the 25th day of the session except by a three-fourths majority. Senator Joseph, remember ing that there are 30 members in the nnnr hnni fle-ured ranidlv on his desk pad, and arose for information. He wanted to know if tne gemieman from Clackamas meant to exact a vote of 22i for the introduction of a bill. "Just so." flashed back JJimiCK, "a men and Joseph." SHERMAN COUNTY farmers raised 4,000.000 bushels of grain in 1912. It required 2.000,000 sacks to take it to market. These sacks cost the farmers 12 cents apiece, but the wicked grain buyers allow them nothing for the sacks. More, they deduct one pound tare for each sack, and then keep the sack, selling It back to the farmer for 6 cents. Ltke a certain celebrated coon trap, this arrangement is calculat ed to "ketch 'em comln'. ketch 'em goin'." Two million sacks, costing 12 cents each, is no small item to the farmers of Sherman County, or of any of the other wheat-growing counties of Oregon. Two million pounds of wheat lost as tare, simply because it Is sold In sacks, is no small Item either.. For reasons such as these Representative Anderson, of Hood River and Wasco, will advocate the passage of Senate bill 36, when it appears in the House. This bill is a sort of legislative lost sheep. It was introduced in the Sen ate toward the end of the last session by Senator now Congressman Slnnott, but was lost In the shuffle in the com mittee to which it was assigned. This year Senator Butler made new bill in the same image, stood it upright on the floor of the Senate, galvanized it with oratorical lightning and sent It on its wav with his most eloquent blessing. If the bill passes there will be no de duction for the weight of the sack when grain or fruit is sold. IF ALL the resolutions in the Legisla ture providing for junketing trips are adopted, along with a few more that are generating in the minds of LOGROLLING IS HIT! Aim of Bills Is Automatic Government. GOVERNOR'S HAND IS SEEN Millage Tax for County Fairs and Snpport of Colleges, and Regu Iation of County Salaries, to Cut Political Traffic. ' STATE CAPITOL, Salem, Or., Jan. 19. (Sneclal.) Bills which have been Introduced in the present session of the Legislature, and others that are promised during the next week or two offer an indication tnat eirorts are db ing made to take out of politics many questions that have caused logrolling and confusion in past Legislatures. The Governor's plan to place all of the district fairs on a millage basis is considered as typical of one of these moves. This will cover every county in the state and make a certain millage provision for each county upon whlcn to sustain a fair. It is also arranged under the bill that two or more coun ties may unite to hold a district fair, or in event any county does not de sire to maintain a fair the- money so raised may be diverted into the road f und. There has been no effort so far to introduce any bills having for their object an appropriation for a county or district fair, due probably to a ae- sire to await disposition of the admin istration measure. v. The plan, also credited to the Gov ernor, to place all county officers on uniform salaries, according to classifi cation of counties, is indicative of an other move to take the question of salaries for county offices out of pol itics. Under this bill such salaries would adjust themselves automatically and would obviate the introduction of bills of this class: . Should the bill now in preparation to rlace the University of Oregon and Oregon Agricultural College on a mill age basis be introduced, as planned, it is declared by supporters tnat it wouia take the schools out of pontics. It Is nossible that the present Leg islature may establish a new record along this line to add to the numerous records wnicn it nas aireauy eoi.au Ushed. LINE IMY BE ADJUSTED LIXX AXD MARION LEGISLATORS TO HOLD COXFEREXCE. Effort Will Be Made to Agree on Boundary and Hare Legisla ture Ratify Measure. ALBANY, Or., Jan. 19. (Special.) To settle the old dispute over the boundary line between Linn and Marlon counties, the delegations from those two counties In the Oregon Legislature will meet at Salem next Tuesday night in an effort to select a boundary sat isfactory to the two counties and es tablish It by an act of the Legislature at the present session. Members of the county courts of the two counties and citizens of both counties also will attend the meeting. The present line between the two counties is described by law as fol lows: "Commencing in the middle of the channel of the Willamette River, opposite the mouth of the Santiam River; thence Tip said river to the north fork; thence up said fork to the Cas cade Mountains; thence due east to the summit of the Cascade Mountains." The disputed point Is where the North Santiam River leaves the Cas cade Mountains, or, in other words, where the mountains begin In follow ing the boundary line up the river. This boundary was"established in 1847. When the country began to be settled the river was by common consent con sidered the boundary line as long as it kept Its general easterly and west erly course. But from the point where the river, considering It from the view point of following upstream with the boundary line, turns southward, there has always been doubt about the line. As a result of this condition land has been assessed in both counties very often. The county courts of the two coun ties met a few years ago and without difficulty adjusted a boundary line sat isfactory to both counties. The bill was introduced in the Legislature, and, supported by the Representatives of both counties, was promptly passed, but for some reason, never discovered. Governor Chamberlain vetoed It. Agitation for the final determina tion of the boundary line has been OF OREGON some of the members, the time may come when there will be so many of the members absent that a quorum will be Impossible. SENATOR DAY proposes to'lntroduce a resolution calling for an investi gation to determine whether or no the Bheets at his boarding-house are full nine feet long. The Senator is built a la Jeffries, and be claims that the sheets on his bed are not only not long enough to clinch at the bottom, but that he Is unable to tuck them under at both sides at once.. Senator Kella her, the author of the nine-foot sheet law. has agreed to "stand at Armaged don" with Senator Day until the de sired investigation is authorized. ONLY a few of the faithful have been in the legislative halls during the adjournment. Some of the Eastern and Southern Oregon members have re mained vigilantly at their desks dur ing the day and part of the evening. The majority of the members have been lured to Portland. SPEAKER M"ARTHTJTt asked the members of the House if they wanted their desks placed in semi circles, as at . former sessions, or left in straight rows across the chamber, as they had been placed for the opening of the session. The outer desks of the front row are occupied by Westerlund, of Jackson, and Bonebrake. of Benton. Both were candidates for the Speakership before the McArthur candidacy became an avalanche. Both wanted the change made. They wished, as they put it, "a better view of the Speaker's desk." N ONE of the farmer members of the House smoke cigarettes. WITHOUT telegraphic or telephonic communication with he outside world, the members of the legislative body who have remained here during adjournment have found themselves going forward recently, and Senator Carson, of Marion County, introduced a bill in the State Senate on the open ing day of the session to establisn tne boundary. The Carson bill is not sat isfactory to Linn County, as it would take about 90,000 acres of land, which, under . the common-consent arrange ment, under which the two . counties have been working, is now in Linn County. According to the boundary proposed In the Carson bill, the line would fol low the river to within-about three miles of the summit and then run due eastward. Linn County people assert that by following the present boundary literally and establishing the boundary definitely, as it was Intended by the original act. it would throw Mill City, Gates. Niagara and Detroit, four towns along the North Santiam River, into Linn County, as, it is asserted, the mountains begin at Mill City. But Linn County has never claimed this boundary and Its Representatives in the Legislature do not intend to claim it now. C. H. Stewart, manager of the Albany Commercial Club, has framed a bill which establishes tne boundary where it has generally been fixed by common consent, and this will be introduced by the Linn County Rep resentatlves. LIQUOR ISSUE MAY RISE PROBABILITY OF LEGISLATIVE FIGHT IS SEEX. Governor's Moral Crusade Measures Carry Many' Restrictions to "Wet" Interests. STATE CAPITOL, Salem, Or., Jan. 19. (Special.) The possibility of a lobby from among the liquor dealers of th state has developed at this session for the first time in several years. Since the "wet" and "dry" fights have been practically all thrown before the people through the initiative, they have not been a disturbing factor In legislative halls. However, this year the Governor's moral-crusade bills carry with them many references to the liquor interests, and many restrictions on the liquor trade. The "wet" and "dry" element thus will come up to confront the mem bers of an Oregon-Legislature after it has been quiescent In that body fox a number of sessions. Bills prohibiting shipment of liquor Into "dry" territory, prohibiting the location of a saloon within or near a district or state fair, prohibiting the location of a saloon within a certain distance, of any railroad depot, and a number of other bills dealing with the liquor traffic have bobbed up. Those who are backing the Governor In his legislative programme consider that the executive stands in a strongly entrenched position as far as any fight that may be made on his programme as a whole is concerned. With the Governor offering practical assurance that he will not be a candi date to .succeed himself, and with the peculiar nature of the programme of reform which he is advocating, the Governor's backers declare that the members will find difficulty in organ izing any concerted effort to down the Governor's bills. They say it will simmer down to a question of where each man will be compelled to cast his own vote in -his own manner on the various bills of the programme without resort to a lineup or combination merely to defeat the bills because they emanate from the Governor's office. The Governor's plan of distributing the measures broadcast among the members is another move to which they are pinning their faith in the eventual outcome of the bills. And they are also sanguine of still one other proposition. That if any of these bills pass both houses they will not be vetoed. On the other hand, there now seems to be np question but a lineup has been made against the executive, and that a factional disposition will creep out in both bodies of the Legislature long before the session closes. In event it Is decided to hold the legislative In vestigation of the various institutions as proposed in the Lewelllng resolu tion, this factional difference may creep Into decided bitterness if any disclosures are made by the Investi gating committee. RAINIER MEASURE PASSED Senate Provides for Jurisdiction Over Lands in Park. WASHINGTON, Jan. 19. (Special.) The Senate today passed Senator Jones' bill providing for the acceptance by the Federal Government from the State of Washington of exclusive Jurisdiction over all lands within Mount Rainier Na tional Park. The Senate also passed the following bills: Av-thorizing the state of Idaho to select Government lands containing phosphate on condition that the phos phate deposits are retained by the United States; House bill authorizing the sale of burned timber on public do main killed by the forest fires of 1910; bill restoring to the public domain the lands segregated under the Carey act where the construction of irrigation works Is not begun within 10 years from the date of segregation. LEGISLATURE practically isolated from Importunities of their constituents. Some of them have already discovered this condition to be more or less pleasant. SAM HILL, who is known from Dan to Beersheba and even unto the islands of the sea as a good roads evangelist, extended an invitation Friday to the members of both houses . to be his guests on a visit to MaryhlU, Wash., there to behold some of the finest highways that have been built since the Applan Way. The roads and highways com mittees of the two houses will decide whether or no the invitation will be accepted. Saturday and Sunday, Feb ruary 8 and 9, are the dates named in the invitation. THE stenographers' rooms provided for the speed writers of the Sen ators and Representatives hold a rather startling array of beauty this session. The "Sage of Lebanon," who has been here for 12 years, says the stenographic delegation is the prettiest in his mem ory. This much for the effect of woman's suffrage. SOME of the wives of the members are beginning to arrive. It Is thought the disruption of outside tele phone and telegraph service may have something to do with their appear ance. IMMEDIATELY after .adjournment, which always follows a motion by Upton, of Multnomah, the House's ex pert adjourner, large cob pipes are lit by Chapman, of Washington, and Pierce, of Coos and Curry. REPRESENTATIVE ANDERSON, of Wasco, is an osteopath. Speaker McArthur was worried on which com mittee to place himi . 5, REPRESENTATIVE MITCHELL, of Baker, Is an orator with a well modulated vocal equipment. mi ii 5i m? mm If voar own continuous-performance, tongue-blistering experience hasn t made you pipe-sore, then you've got more patience than most people have. Why, man, think what it means to suffer the tortures of the lost, just because you like that sweet old jimmy pipe of yours. Get wise to the best bet ever in jimmy pipe tobacco. It s Smoke it all day go to it as hard as you like you'll feel better when you get through , than before you started because it can't bite your tongue. The bite's cut out by a patented process. Prince Albert makes a cigarette that's a wonder. Just you roll one tip and get that cool smoke and fragrance and flavor into your mouth. Say, you'll take a new lease on cigarette joy. P. A. it mold in th tbppyS cent rmd bat. tidy 10 cmnt red tin and handtom poand and half-pound humidor mvmrywhT. R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N. C KIDDLE HAS PLAN Revision of All Projected Bills Suggested. ECONOMY IS POINTED OUT Eastern Senator Would Have Com mittee or Attorneys Dress Vp Proposed Measures and Do Away With Duplication. ctattt! CAPITOL. Salem. Or., Jan. 19. (Special.) To establish a business like system in the Legislature as w legal phraseology and construction of bills, Senator Kiddle, of Union and Wallowa counties, advocates a novel procedure. ' tr J nraoant RVRtPTTl DlllS are uuuer jj.o..- -. drawn and. introduced promiscuously by Senators ana nepreseiiuiwM frequently have little or no technical i ...i ,i law nnri B.rA Often UTl- nnun n vin" able to couch their bills in terms to make them legally noie-prooi. i.-(iio aitcro-poto that a. nrot)- OCIiaLUl iviuuiv ouon-""" - er method of rectifying this condition would be to create a joint committee between the iriouse ana me oenttio . receive and revise all bills before their Thin ?nmmttfpp. he sug gests, should be made up of lawyers. or as a substitute lie recommends em ployment of outside attorneys to go oil hills nnd dress them up in legal form before Introduction. Kiddle Clvea Reason. "We now find the code and statute i i-- ijAn with hilln (yirrvine clauses relating to the repeal of all acts or parts of acts wnicn may oe in con flict with some particular measure," i j o - u-Ia trtrlnv. "Thin con- ccuftiui - - dition should be remedied. When an act repeals any other act ii snouio. oe so stated specifically in the body of n .AnAaliTio- mpasure. We would thus wipe out a great amount of dead wood which is now on me state uuwa and furnish a much more clear and comprehensive system of laws than we now have. - "The special revision committee would by no means stand in the way th i-oiriilar work of the usual standing committees. "The bills would merely oe reviseu as to legal form. After they had been so revised they would be introduced, take their usual course and be re ferred to the usual committee. "JolteTS" Not Feared. "It may be argued that a revision committee would be given altogether too mucii power under the arrange ment that I suggest. But the bills would all have to go through the House and Senate, through the regu lar committees as well, and there would be small chance of the revision com mittee, or of its members, putting jokers' into the bills without their being detected. "Looking through the bill book, so I fi - (.11 1 r c o " . M. . exact duplications of bills, not only duplicated in one house, but bills are introduced In tne fiouse ana ine oen-. ate at the same time that are practi cally counterparts. "Here the question oi expenses en ters. It costs money to print bills and there is a large unnecessary expense in printing a quota of exactly identi cal bills. These duplications could be done away with through the work of , v. ravidnn rammtttea and a material amount of expense cut down." Experiment Farm Proposed. STATE CAPITOI. .Salem, Or, Jan. 19. "Slide, Kelly "slide one dime, ten cents, over the plate unhook the password to a better smoke than could be." A good many people have been handing tobacco line. m the national joy smoke (Special.) Senator Stewart is pre paring to introduce, early next week, two bills providing for additional agri cultural experiment stations one In Malheur County and the other In Grant County. The bills provide appropria tions of $4000 annually for each of the experiment stations, the stations to be under the control of the Board of Regents of the Oregon Agricurtural College. ROGUE RIVER ACT DISCUSSED Jackson County Delegation Agrees on Measure to Be Introduced. STATE CAPITOI Salem. Or.. Jan. 19. (Special.) In an effort to settle u unrrna T?)vr pnntroversv which arose following the passage by the people In 1910 of an act closing that river to commercial iisning, ocuami Von der Hellen and Representatives f ir nti .Two nnri Westerlund. com prising' the Jackson County delegation, have held a conierence anu piiiw settled on the provisions of a bill which will be introduced by Reames. The bill, in substance, will provide that the river be closed to commercial fishing between August 10 and Septem ber 1 and between November 20 and April 15, and every Saturday from 6 P. M. until Monday at 6 A. M. It will further provide that gill nets have a mesh of at least eight and one half Inches, and seine nets of at least four and one-half Inches. The river will be open, otherwise, to commercial fishing from the mouth to the confluence of the Illinois River, this distance being practically all tide ter. It is understood that no effor will be made to pass the bill which was ve toed by the Governor two years ago. It is said that many interests have reached an agreement on the present bill, and while undoubtedly a fight will develop, efforts will be made to push the bill through. BIMi INDIRECTLY . WOUIiD EN LARGE OREGON CITY. Dimick Measnre Would Enable Town to Annex Mills Located on Opposite Side of Willamette. rt & TP! nAPTTOL. Salem. Or.. Jan. 19. (Special.) "In addition to the methods now provided by law for change of boundaries and annexation of adjoining territory by incorporated cities and towns, every such incorpo rated city and town Is hereby granted power to change its boundaries and annex and include within said city or town limits, as a part thereof, any adjoining territory not exceeding 200 acres at "one time, and which said jjn4inM ..nltnnr i n (I thA nron. ilUJVJlll'llfS - - J - erty therein shall be shown by the as sessment rolls or the county to nave been of an average assessed value of not less than 3000 per acre for the three years next preceding the pro posed annexation." This provision in the opening par agraph of a bill introduced in the Sen ate by Dimick, of Clackamas County, amending the law relating to the change of boundaries of incorporated cities and towns, while apparently gen eral in its effect, is taken to be a di rect effort leading up to the eventual annexation by Oregon City of the mills and mill properties lying directly across the river from Oregon City. None of the mills or mill properties which are across the Willamette from Oregon City are now In the limits, the limits going to the thread of the stream. These properties are valued at sev eral millions of dollars and would vast ly increase the assessed valuation of Oregon City. It Is estimated that the CITY EXPAHSiOH IS AIM 4i 'V r - i ti i the French bevel plate and you ever did imagine a smoke themselves a lemon in the JBJWP COT' mills. If brought into the limits of Oregon City would probably Increase the assessed valuation by one-half. Dimick also has a bill providing for regulating of hours of labor, requiring that an eight-hour day be" established in those mills that operate 22 hours or more in a day. Smith Proposes to right. STATE CAPITOL, Salem, Or., Jan. 19. (Special.) Regardless ef the heavy opposition which he expects from the attorneys In the Senate, Senator Smith, of Coos and Curry, declares he intends to make a decided fight on his bill to place the question of compensation for fees for attorneys In personal injury cases in the. discretion of the court. The bill was one of the early ones in troduced, and, although an adverse re port is expected, the bill may develop some fireworks. Maby advantages are claimed by the New Tork inventor of .an automobile tire hav ing a vacuum chamber running through It Instead of being pneumatic. NOTHE No young woman. In the Joy of coming motherhood, should neglect to prepare her system for the physi cal ordeal she Is to undergo. The health of both herself and the coming: child depends largely upon the car she bestows upon herself during the waiting months. Mother's Friend prepares the expectant mother's sys tem for the coming erent, and Its usa makes her comfortable during all the term. The baby, too. Is more apt to ba perfect and strong where the mother has thus prepared herself for nature's supreme function No better advice could be given a . young expectant mother than that she use Mother's TVfflTEIirri'C Friend; it is a JjJUJJ flUJitS medicine that has f&lnniTridn proven Its value NFKILilJEJ In thousands of cases. Mother's Friend is sold at drug stores. Write for free book for expect ant mothers. BRADFIELD REGULATOR. CO.. Atlaata. Ca. QUININE? NO! PAFE'S BEST FOR BAD COLD First Dose of Pape's Cold Compound Believes AH Misery From a Cold or the Grippe. It Is a positive fact that a dose of Pape's Cold Compound, taken every two hours until three consecutive doses are taken, will nd the Grippe and break up the most severe cold, either In the head, chest, back, stomach, limbs or any part of the body. It promptly relieves the most mis erable headache, dullness, head and nose stuffed up. feverlshness. sneez ing, sore throat, running of the nose, mucous catarrhal discharges, sore ness, stiffness and rheumatic twinges. Take this wonderful Compound as directed, with the knowledge that there is nothing elBe in the world, which will cure your cold of end Grippe misery as promptly and with out any other assistance or bad after effects as a 25-cent package of Pape's Cold Compound, which any druggist can supply accept no substitute contains no quinine. Belongs in every, home. Zastes nice acts gently.