FOLLOW The CROWDS . Jo 8 The L y Popular Demand Continued Balance This UPLANDS ARE WHITE Snow Covers Eastern Oregon . and Part of Washington. BAKER GOES A-SLEIGHING Tee Forms at Canyonvllle and Fall in Hills Ranges From Tiiin Cor- cring to DcptU of 7 Indies. No Damage Iteported. Winter gathered Eastern Oregon and Southwestern Washington in its em brace yesterday and set sleighbells a-tingling at Baker, sent stockmen to the range to bring their herds to shelter, and was heavy enough in some places to break branches from trees. Ko damage was reported. Depths of from one and one-haif to seven inches were recorded at. various points, while thin ice was also re ported for the first time this season. Nothing worse than a threat of rain was experienced ir Portland, the maxi mum temperature being 61 degrees. More snow is predicted in the dis tricts which are covered now. BAKER FOLIC GO SLEIGHING Tree Brandies Broken and Street Force Is Swamped. BAKER, Or.. Nov. 9. (Special.) Baker awoke this morning in the midst of Winter, after retiring in balmy weather. Many tree branches were broken by an eight-inch snow con taining .49 inch of moisture, and, there was an insistent demand for snow shovclers all day. Sleighs appeared and the sport was good, both in city snd country. The entire city street cleaning force was swamped in pre venting the flooding of sewers. Re ports from the country say little dam age was done to late fruit. There was slight flurry of enow this afternoon, with predictions of rain or enow tonight. IjA GR.VXDE IS COVEKED Seven-Inch Snow Recorded in Near by Valeys. LA GRANDE. Or.. Nov. 9. (Special.) This morning Eastern Oregon was clad in a mantle of snow, ranging in depth from two inches on the floor of the Grand Ronde and Wallowa val leys to six and seven inches in the mountains. .stockmen hurried to the hills to bring their flocks to shelter. CAN YO WILLE HAS ICE. TOO Snow Melts in Valley as It Falls, bul Covers Hills. CANTONVILLR. Or., Nov. 9. (Spe cial.) Canyonville had its first snow of the season jesterday and today. In Miuif m 13 piasltt mac A Screaming Comedy in Two Acts Startling Society Drama In the valley the snow melted as it felt but further up in the hills it remained. At the summit, seven miles south of here, a. two-inch fall was reported. Thle morning a thin coating of ice covered the pools of water in the roads. On November 2 of last year snow fell here, covering the ground from one inch in the valley to three inches in the hills. BAKER TAX LEVIES FIXED City Property Will Pay IS. 2 Mills; County 8 Mills Plus State Tax. 1 BAKER, Or.. Nov. 9 (Special.) Baker's. tax levy for next year is 13.2 mills, and that of Baker County is 8 mills outside the state tax. These were the figures given out by the City and County Commissioners at their separ ate meetings this afternoon. The city tax shows an increase of 6 mills over that of last year, while the county estimate is 2 mills lower than a, year ago. This is the county's first budget, so that it may .. vary slightly from the estimate. The city levy is to increase only 2 mills because of the closing of saloons and cutting off of $15,000 of liquor licenses. The amount to be raised is $65,931 and the assessed value of property is $5,272,840. In the county $199,030.25 is needed, and the assessed valuation is $24,171,372. I0NE COUNCILMAN DIES Edward T. Perkins, Postmaster lor 17 Tears, Passes at 68. , IONE, Or.. Nov. 9. (Special.) Ed ward T. Perkins died . at the home of John Bryson Monday at 6S years of age. He came West from Missouri with his parents at the age of 6 years and settled near Dallas. Or, 31 years later moving to Lone. He was postmaster of lone for 17 years, was Justice of the Peace, was elected to succeed himself as City Coun cilman last December and was School Clerk of District No. 35. He was a Mason, an Oddfellow and an Elk. He leaves a son. A. C. Perkins, of San Francisco, and a daughter. Dallas Perkins, of Portland, who was with him at his death. CAPTAIN CHURCH IS DEAD Noted Police Official Succumbs to - . Effects of Blood Poison. ABERDEEN, Wash., Nov. S. (Spe cial.)K..Y. Church, one of the best known police officers of this section, and for' six years Na member of the Aberdeen police force.' died this morn ing from blood poisoning. Mr. Church always served as a plain clothesraan or as captain while on the Aberdeen force and several times fig ured in the arrest of notorious crimin als. He is survived by a wife and two small sons. He made a valiant fight for life,' but when told ' yesterday, that his life bung on a' slender thread he prepared his will and cheerfully aid good-bye to his family and intimate friends. Tn granting concessions for development of It recently discovered potash deposits, Spain Is - requiring concessionaires to re servo for national consumption such parts of the salts -as the -suvernjnent deems ad-visabl. TTTV- MORXIXQ OREGOXTAX. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1915. The Latest Adventure of Get-Rich-Quick 99 ROBERT B. MANTELL and GENEVIEVE HAMPER Most Eminent Dramatic Star "The Blindness of Devotion" Coming Sunday, Nance 0"Neil in RAIL TAX GUT ASKED Southern Pacific Declares 33 Per Cent of Earnings Goes. COMMISSION CENTERS FIRE Reduction of $8,58 5,2 6 8 in Valua tion Requested on Plea That Jit neys, Too, Are Making Inroads Into Receipts of Company. SALEM, Or.. Nov. 9. (Special.) De claring that the taxing districts where in the Southern Pacific Company and its subsidaries operate this year re ceived bigger returns from the rail road than the bond and stockholders themselves, and that 33 per cent of the road's net earnings in 1914 went for taxes, William M. Colvig, tax and right-of-way attorney for the South ern Pacific, today appealed to the State Tax Commission fro a reduction in val uation on its Oregon properties amount ing to $8,585,266. The 1914 assessed valuation of the Southern Pacific and subsidaries was $44,409,923. What action the Commission will take in the case of the Southern Pa cific and other railroads and public utilities which have besieged it for the last two weeks for reductions in as sessments is a problem. Commission Between Fires. "The Commission finds itself between two fires." said State Treasurer Kay today, "and the problem of arriving at an equitable adjustment of valuation is difficult. On the one hand, counties mrougnout tne state are demanding in creased ratios, while the utilities ask for a decrease." In his argument today for a reduced assessment, Mr. Colvig demonstrated that 33 per cent of the Southern Pa cific's net earnings in 1914 went for taxes, leaving 67 per cent for hire of equipment and joint facilities, interest on bonds, dividends on stock, etc. "Outside of Multnomah County our tax payments on operating properties alone were more than 8 per cent of the total taxes levied in the counties through which we operate," said Mr. Colvig. "We paid over 3 per cent of all taxes collected in the entire state. This includes Multnomah County, which our lines touch only on the south end. as well as all the Central and Eastern Oregon country, in which, of course, we have no lines." Cot In Earnings Laid 4 Jitneys. That motortrucks and jitney service are rendering railroad investments much less desirable,- if not actually questionable, was the assertion of Mr. Colvig. He declared that already the railroads had felt the effects of good roads in a reduction in. earnings from local travel. "In Jackson County," continued Mr. Colvig. "taxes from our operated rail road amount to practically one-tenth of all the taxes collected in the county. For contributing our one-tenth we are TEC THE A1 - . WalMini ALSO already rewarded by the necessity of lamns on our service between Grants Pass and Ashland, a falling off in local freight shipments and the certainty of further loss of revenue as the road progresses. The same conditions exist more or less all along our lines." " " RAIL CUTOFF COMPLETED Echo-Coyote Route Is Practically Ready for Trains. PENDLETON, Or., Nov. 9. (Special.) The Echo-Coyote cut-off is now com pleted and . practically ready for the running of trains over it, according to Colonel H. G. Newport, of the Newport Construction Company, which has had contracts for the grading of a large amount of the right of way, and who are finishing up the concrete work on the bridge across the Umatilla River below Stantield. It is probable that some fast freights and other trains will be run over the road at once, but it. is unlikely that train service will be regularly sched iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiriiiMiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii iii iiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiina THE STEIN-BLOCH CO. Wholesale Tailors ROCHESTER, N.Y. iHiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiin SOLD EXCLUSIVELY BY. ' Featuring Burr Mcintosh Max Figman Lolita Robertson The Most Beautiful Face on Earth "A Woman's uled over the new road until the df vision headquarters are completed at Pilot Rock Junction. GARFIELD LETS CONTRACTS County Improvements to Be Made Aggregating $19,402. POMEROT, Wash., Nov. 9. (Spe cial.) Three contracts for road im provements in Garfield County, aggre gating $19,402.90, were let by the Board of County Commissioners last week. The largest contract was obtained by a bid of $9249.90 on a permanent high way east of Pomeroy. The other two contracts were let for the Shelton grade and Rice bar improvement. ' The three contracts were obtained by outside firms. The contractors agreed to employ Garfield County labor,, and the work will begin at once. Burglar Begins Second Sentence. ROSEBURG, Or., Nov. 9. (Special.) John Larrison, yho yesterday was taken to Salem to serve a term In the IT IS well to remember that it is tailoring that sets off the style of a suit or overcoat. Smart Clothes look well indefinitely because they are the product of Sixty one Years of Knowing How. THIS LASEl MAMKS THE SMARTEST UADY-TOWUn CLOTH" BEN SELLING TEM Startling Society Drama Past" Penitentiary, following conviction on a charge of burglary, was once previous ly confined in that institution, accord ing to fheriff Quine... On the first oc casion Larrison was committed to the Penitentiary from Marion County on a charge of burglary. MRS. EVANS. HEADS RELIEF New Chairman of Department Plans to Help Tubercular. Mrs. Sarah A. Evan- yesterday was appointed chairman of public health of the Oregon Federation of Women's Clubs and the accounts and bookso of that department were turned over to her by Mrs. Sadie-Orr Dunbar. The appointment was made by Mrs. Charles Castner. the new state president. Mrs. Evans said that steps will be taken immediately , to dispense some-of the funds for tubercular cases and that appeals for help made-to her will be investigated and assistance will be given. She will submit her plans to the state federation board. No worthy cases will be denied. REMAINDER OF WEEK W Cash Buys the Best $3.00 Shoes for men and women at" Knight Shoe Co. Steps to Economy Dept. Morrison Street Near Broadway LADIES! DARKEN ; YOUR GRAY HAIR Use Grandma's Sage Tea and Sulphur Recipe and Nobody Will Know. . The use of Sage and Sulphur for re storing faded, gray hair to its natural color dates back to grandmother's time. She used it to keep her hair beauti- iuny aarK. glossy and abundant. When ever her hair fell out or took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance, this simple mixture was applied with won derful effect. But brewing at home Is mussy and out-of-date. . Nowadays by asking at any drug "store for a So cent bottle of "Wyeth s Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem edy." you will get this famous old recipe which can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair and is splendid for dandruff dry, feverish, itchy scalp and falling ' hair. A well-known downtown druggist says-it darkens thehair'so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or 'soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears, and after another ap plication or two, it becomes beautifully dark, glossy, soft and abundant. Adv. Itching Tortun Stops It is unnecessary for you to suffer with eczema, ringworm, rashes and similar skin troubles. A little zemo. gotten at any drug store for 25c, or t for extra large bottle, and prompt ly applied will usually give instant relief from itching torture. It cleanses and soothes the skin and heals quick--ly and effectively most skin diseases. Zemo is a wonderful disappearing liquid and does not smart the most del icate skin. It is not greasy, is easily applied and costs little. Oet it today and save all further distress. -.. - - Zemo, Cleveland. - eek