STATUTORY LEVIES -ffn'rmririrfflrhi liinlliiiimiinr-" - i,nir.tit" ri.--. iwewii'itillli i'MWiMfi " 'fi-'im-j'tjifrmft .M,,' in ule i i tfdir.i.r a.r jmii rtim-1 -t- ii i ifrrrrn reinrawltM rir YT" ' .- T-1 HP f1 -TTfc A '"W 9 If You Don't See This You Might as SNAGTAXREDUGTION1 H ILJ ii 6 Well Stop Going to Moving Pictures! Probe Commission to See i What Can Be Eliminated. LAKE TRANSFER OPPOSED Body Firmly Against State Surren dering Any Jlore Property or Water Rights. "Ml d) i fv Y W BY JOHN W. KELLY. Invariably in every public hearing the- state tax investigation conrmis sioa has been informed that the peo ple want a reduction in taxes. This demand is statewide. "Something i must bo done.'' the commission has been told. And that is as far as the commission has found unanimity of opinion. It depends -whose ox is being gored this proposition of cutting down taxes. Everyone wants the reduction to be made on the other fellow's pet (scheme. What is a "frill and. rancy to one becomes a necessity to another, and what one indignant taxpayer des ignates as "folderol" another cham pions as most practical. There is no budget item creating taxes but has its stout defenders. Statutory levies In May. After hearing delegations from 15 counties in eastern Oregon this week the commission has been informed that one stumbling block against the reduction of taxes in counties are the number of statutory levies; with these the county courts have no option the law says these certain levies must be made, and so they cannot be elim inatedw In order that this phase of the tax problem may be dealt with comprehensively, with a view to ac tion .by the .legislature at the 1923 ses srion, the commission will ask an opinion of the attorney-general to prepare a list of mandatory levies and discretionary levies. Fortified with a list of the com pulsory and optional levies, the com mission can then give the legislators something to work with along con strnctive lines. Some, or all. of the mandatory levies may possibly be repealed by the law-making body, or made discretionary with county courts. Diamond Lake Transfer Opposed. That no further property of the state be surrendered except where it is shown that the state will be over whelmingly benefited is the firm de termination of the state tax Invest! gation commission. This will be a recommendation in the commission's report. Relinquishment of any water nights meets with the opposition of the com mission, as it means decreasing the taxable assets of the state. The parr ticular significance of this resolution adopted yesterday is -that it places the state tax investigation on record against the plan to turn Diamond lake and surrounding country over to the federal government. As for Diamond lake it is not. in the opinion of the commission, any more of a wonder than half a dozen other bodies of water in Oregon. Second Trip 'Mapped. Tn line with the commission's -at' tltude on having the state retain its lands and lakes, the commission is much opposed to the "certificate of necessity and convenience," since the adoption of which, the commission says, water powers have been tied up. At the meeting yesterday the com mission outlined its second and last trip. Having covered the eastern half of the state in its search for infor mation on tax problems, the commis ston will go through the western sec tlon, so that all counties will have an opportunity to be heard before the commission knuckles down to the compilation of its report. As agreed on yesterday, the trip win start with a hearing at Medford, April 24, where Jackson, Josephine. Klamath and Lake counties can be heard; April 25, Roseburg; April 2, Eugene, for Lane, Coos and Curry counties; Apru av, AlDany. for Linn Benton and Lincoln counties; April z, aaiem, ror Marlon and Polk coun t'es; April 29, McMinnville. for Yam hill. Washington and Tillamook coun ties; May 1, Oregon City. Whether the sentiment regarding educational matters and roads, couhty agents and extension work and in equality of assessments is the same in western Oregon as in eastern Ore gon remains to be seen. . Today the commission will hold its hearing $n Astoria for Clatsop and Columbia counties. SPINACH WILL BE GROWN Diked Land Farmers to Produce for Cannery Markets. : CLATSKAXIE, Or.. March 17. (Spe cial.) Farmers of the Delta Gardens, a tract comprising thousands of acres of diked Columbia river marshes ad joining Clatskanie, will give spinach growing a thorough test th:s year. J. N. Miller, one of the best known farmers of the district, has contracted to raise 25 acres for a cannery at Rainier. Spinach is something of an experi ment to find a garden crop that is readily marketable. The land pro duces cabbage in abundance and prac tically every kind of root vegetable, but recently there has been no great demand in the outside markets. TWO WORKMEN KILLED Industrial Accident Commission Reports on Week. SALEM, Or., March 17. (Special.) .There were two fatalities in Oregon due to industrial accidents during the week ending March 16. according to a report prepared by the state indus trial accident commission here today. The victims were Eric Sweet, bucker, of Kerby, and Donald W. Appleman, laborer, of Portland. Of the 302 accidents reported, 270 were subject to the benefits of the workmen's compensation act, 23 were from firms and corporations that have rejected the law. and nine were from public utility corporations and not subject to the provisions of the compensation act. Ex-Banker to Take Graduate Work. ALBANY, Or., March 17. (Special.) Alfred C. Schmitt of this city, until recently president of the First Na tional bank of Albany, has gone east to take post-graduate work in several prominent universities preparatory to resuming work as an instructor this fall. He will be assistant professor of business administration at Oregon -Agricuiturl college. Mr. Schmitt was a college professor before he entered the local bank several years ago. Phone your want ads to the Ore gonian. Main. 7070. Automatic 560-95. Admission: Matinees Evenings 50 Programme lne lodes Pat he Weekly TD ffiRT STRIKE IS 1 OWNERS' AND WORKERS' COM MITTEE ORGANIZED. Doubt Expressed That Xew Wage Scale Can Be Drawn in Time to Prevent Halt in Work. XEW YORK, March 17. The an thracite coal mine owners and work ers' committee of eight tonight began to organize for a long series of de liberations seeking to avert a strike by amicable settlement of their wage disagreements. President Lewis of the interna tional organizations of United min ers and Samuel D. vvarriner, chair man of the operators' policies coln- mittee, both members of the commit tee of eight, were optimistic. They expressed doubt, however, that a new wage scale could be Brawn in time to prevent suspension of mining op erations in the central, competitive field on April 1. The whole mining industry, from the digging of the coal in the col lieries to the shipment, distribution and sale to the consuming public, will be taken into consideration in nego tiating the new contract,, it was said. The miners expressed determination to '"get down to the bottom of costs and profits." The owners were equally emphatic in asserting that every angle of the industry had been gone into. "Despite the great divergence of views with rrhich we begin negoti ations, ' I believe the committee in tends honestly to try to work out a solution of the wage problem in the anthracite mines," was the statement of Mr. Lewis. Neither he nor Mr. Warriner, speaking for the operators, would predict upon what basis wages of the miners would be computed, whether the demands for the universal 'adop tion of the check-off system would be considered, or for how long it was desired that the- contemplated new contract should extend. ALL DEPOSITORS PAID Affairs of Eltopia State Bank Are ; Being Cleared Up. OLYMPIA. Wash., March (Spe cial.) Depositors in the Eltopia State bank at Eltopia, Franklin county, have been paid in full through assess ments which the .stockholders of the bank levied on themselves, and the affair of the bank are being ciosed up, John P. Duke, supervisor of bank ing, was advised today. The ' bank. m . iwwT C 1 2 .: svi'- ill; mm ''HI p CECIL TEAGUE at the Wurlitzer and in concert tomorrow at 1:30 P. M. PROGRAMME Espana Waltz Waldteufel Mellow Southern " Moon . .Cecil Teague Gems from the Repertoire of the Chicago Grand Opera Co. Airs of St. Patrick doing business in a district which has had successive crop failures that have resulted in heavy losses, has been in a critical condition and has been ope rating for some time under the super vision of a deputy bank examiner. All depositors have been paid and all outstanding drafts will te cared for as they come, the statement to Supervisor Duke aid. The bank at the close of last year had deposits to taling $83,000. It was formed in 1913 GREEKS RELEASE VESSEL Turkish Troops and Passengers on ' Italian Steamer Freed. CONSTANTINOPLE, March 17. The Greeks have released the steamer Africa, which was seized Wednesday by Greek warships off Ineboli. The steamer was flying the Italian flag. The commander of the Greek flagship Averof formally apologized to the captain of the Africa andreleased the steamer- and the Turkish passen gers on board. A dispatch from Constantinople Wednesday said the Africa was taken to Mudania, where after a three-hour search of the vessel, the Turkish pas sengers, including the personnel of a Turkish sanitary corps, were declared prisoners of war. IDAHO ORATOR IS NAMED William Fowler to Represent Uni versity in Tri-State Contest. UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO, Moscow, March 17. (Special.) WilliamFow ler of Wendell, a sophomore in the college of law, will represent the Uni versity of Idaho in the tri-state ora torical contest between the Univer sity of Oregon, University of Wash ington and University of Idaho, to be held in Seattle in May. Fowler won the tryout with his oration on "The Foreign-Born Ameri can," said to have been one of the best ever presented at a preliminary trial. Professor Collins of the Eng lish department will assist Fowler in preparing for the triangular meet. Employment Campaign Planned. BAKER, Or., March 17. (Special.) Participation of Baker post, No. 41, American Legion, in the national campaign of that organization to find employment for ex-soldiers was out lined at a meeting last night. It was decided to have speakers at the Kiwanis and chamber of commerce luncheons during that week to solicit aid from those bodies and to inter view all employers in the county relative to situations. Plans for the annual meeting of the post on ADril 6 also were furthered. At this meet ing. iniUa,Uon wiu be. Jield. - 4. ' . The play that for years has been the greatest of all successes on the American stage and for which $250,000 was paid for half the screen rights alone. ' . Cast includes Harry Myers, the Yankee of "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court." This is not another "4 Horsemen" the style is too different but it's just as good. FREIGHT GUT ANNOUNCED SAN FRANCISCO LINES MEET PCGET SOUND REDUCTION. Ii umber Rate of $12.50 for Thou sand Feet and $5 for Ton of Cargo New Schedule. Meeting the cut of the Blue Fun nel line out of Puget sound in the trans-Pacific trade, which a week ago lowered the lumber tariff from 15 to $12.50 a thousand feet, lines plying out of San Francisco to ori ental ports have fixed a rate of $5 a ton on general cargo and J12.60 on lumber, according to messages re ceived yesterday from the south. Portland steamship operators re garded the move as a fight between lines engaged in competition for transcontinental business, and point ed to the Canadian Pacific as having followed the Blue Funnel cut. On the other hand they said that San Francisco is- not a lumber shipping point, hence the move in meeting the cut rate on lumber really is without effect. Harry L. Hudson, manager of the Pacific bureau of the Port of Port land commission and commission of public docks, was advised of the cut by San Francisco lines. None of the lines operating out of the Columbia river district has yet acted to meet the lower rates. The, tariff on gen eral cargo from this port is from $8 to 9 a ton. K. D. Dawson, general manager of the Columbia-Pacific Shipping com pany, said . last night he looked for the rate situation to be restored in a short time and said the drop was precipitated because of efforts . to draw more transcontinental freight. which the Portland services are not so dependant on as the San Fran cisco lines. HAND IN THEFT PROVED Joe Kletzel Found to Have Re ceived Stolen Goods. Joe Kletzel, indicted for receiving stolen property, was found guilty by a jury in the court of Circuit Judge Evans yesterday afternoon after a trial occupying most of the day. He will be sentenced next Thursday. Kletzel was discovered by a city In spector to have installed a five-horsepower electric motor, valued at $150, in -a mattress factory on the Foster road, and the motor was identified as the one stolen by Andy Hilsentrager, who pleaded guilty to the theft and was sentenced to 60- days ia the coua- its mm Direction ty jail recently. Kletzel told con flicting stories 'as- to how he came into posssession of the motor and the authorities believed that he knew it was stolen. George Graham, deputy district at torney, prosecuted the case. BANK'S DIVIDEND BIGGER English Institution's Increase Is an Agreeable Surprise. NEW YORK, March 17. The Bank of England, which has distributed a 5 per cent dividend semi-annually since 1914, has increased the rate to 6 per cent, a telegram to a financial agency here said today. A dividend at an annual rate of 12 per cent has not been paid by the Bank of England for a whole year since 1806. The increased dividend was an agreeable surprise to international bankers. Even those with influential London connections seemed to have no intimation that such action was impending. The largest disbursement, coming so soon after the reduction of the discount rate, was accepted here as proof of England's steady recovery to normal or pre-war conditions. BRITISH COALITION WINS Government Party Succeeds in Bye Election at Cambridge. LONDON, March 17. (By the Asso ciated Press.) The coalition unfcn- ists won by a plurality of 3943 in the recent Cambridge bye election against a divided opposition. The election was for a successor to Sir Eric Geddes, coalition unionist, formerly minister of transport, re signed. The successful candidate was Sir Douglas Newton, who polled 10,897 votes as against the labor candidate's 6954, and the independent liberal's 4520, it was announced today. At the general election in 1918 Sir Eric Geddes defeated the labor can didate by a majority of 7764. Fugitives From Baker Arrested. BAKER, Or.. March 17. (Special.) After passing a check for $50 on District Attorney Levens and another for $25 on Baker's bakery, R. O. San ders and Paul Berkman were arrested on complaint of authorities at San Jose, Cal., late yesterday. They had produced credentials from an Elks lodge at San Pedro, Cal. . Word re ceived from the San Jose authorities states that the men are also wanted on charges of bigamy, forgery and embezzlement. An automobile shipped here from Pendleton was seized end two women who accom panied the alleged check operators axe being neldor investigation. 5: n n m 111 If l-. 'Jensen arid SHIP PAPER IS Dfi SALE SECURITIES ARE OFFERED TO AMERICAN PUBLIC. 'Original 'Cost of Face Value" Is Many Millions of Dollars, Says Board Viee-President. WASHINGTON, D. C, March 17. Vice-President S. Kimball of the ship ping board, in charge of finance, an nounced today that the emergency fleet corporation was offering at competitors' sale securities obtained for advances by the government "to the people, on account of the world war," to finance the shipbuilding dur ing the emergency. The securities and properties, Mr. Kimball caid, "at an original cost of face value," to taled many millions of dollars. Mort gages for sale are on housing proj ects at Newport News, V a., at Sun village and Sun Hill, Chester, Pa., and Newburgh, N. Y. Other villages located adjacent to. shipyards on the Atlantic coast from Maine to FlorlJa, on the great lakes and on the Pacific coast will be sold, Mr. Kimball said, as soon as the necessary" arrangements are completed. The mortgages on the real estate offered for sale are valued at $12, 410,432 and notes secured by pre ferred mortgages have face value of $33,500,000. The pre-stig-e of Oregonlan Want Ads has been attained not merely by Fa great boon There are many mothers, nervous and rundown in vitality, to whom. Scott's Eoiylsion would be a ereat boon. It s the very genius or Scott's Emulsion to build strength. jTyj Scott & Bowie. Bloomfield. N. J. ALSO MAKERS OF" (Tablets or Granules) 25 INDIGESTION 20-15sk IBM r. r r F EtFMOID i I 3T J- mm SOME UNUSUAL COMMENTS The real success of the New York season. It is attracting enorm ous crowds and has received unstinted praise. Baltimore Sun. Audiences went into hysterics with laughter and tears. Chicago American. Lovely, lovable I never so thoroughly enjoyed any play in all the world. Chicago Daily News. yon jjerberg The Oregonian's large circulation, but by the fact that all its readers are interested in Oreeronlan Want-Ads. FLU LEFT HELPLESS, SAYS Could Hardly Eat Enough to Keep Soul and Body Together and Strength Was All Gone Says Avery Friend's Advice Saved Day for Him. "It was an old friend who told me to take Tanlac and he was never a better friend than when he advised me to try it," said T. R. Avery, 667 East Twentieth St. South, Portland, Or. "My troubles started two years ago when an attack of flu left me almost helpless. My stomach gave me all kinds of trouble, my appetite was so poor I ate hardly enough to keep body and soul together. "It certainly was a big and pleas ant surprise to me the way Tanlac straightened up all my troubles. I feel just like a new man and nave more life and energy than in years" . Tanlac is sold by all druggists. Adv. "I MjTtas emr wotom thmt mm with kidney trouble to try Foley Kklner Pill.'' Ma Brown ar. ot CleTOUod. Ohio. Tom thAflk Foley Kidney Mia that I fool better, mucb stronger than In 25 years." John F. Broofcs. Omaha, Mob. When suffering- from Backache, Rheumatism, Lame Back, Kidneys or Bladder, TOLEY KIDSIEY FII1S Tonic in Action Quick to Give Good Keauita if MAKES SHORT WORK cfPdxn. Sloans for rheumatism lumbago sciatica neuralgia sprains,strains weak backs stiff joints ja alt drnggiiU. J5e, 70e. MO ff Liniment Pain'al Lr-neimJ Makes Sick Skins Well One of Dr. Hobaon'a Family Remedies. For a c leer, healthy com pie lion tut freely Dr.Hobsons Eczema Ointment The C. Gee Wo IKI)l(IMi CO. C. fJEK WO has made a life study of the curative properties poe Kp:ed in root. Vv " I herb, buds nd f?', ' I bark and tin compounder iner -from hlH wonder ful, well - known remedies, all of which are Per fectly harmless, as no poisonlus driifr or narcotics of any kind are used In their make up.. For stomach, lunit, kidney, liver, rheumatism. nvuralRla. catarrh, bladder, blood, nprvomnni, gall stones and all disorders of men, women and children. Try C. CSeo Wo n Wonderful and Well-Known Hoot and Herb Remedies. Oond renult will sur-ly and quickly follow. Call or write for information. THE C. GEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO. Wi Flint Ntrrrt. I'nrtlaml. tlrrmn, i Phone your want ads to the Ore gonian. Main 7070, Automatic 560-85. i Wi. mMmfc'fo ". aifc k u t