wtwr '0f v .vol ix., No. VOTERS MUST PASS ON NINE NEW MEASURES ELECTION DAV IS JI'XH S. WHEN PEOPLE CAN At X 'KIT OH RE JWT new, I.AWH BILLS IIP $'J,5()(),(MM Ankitl for Vw... Iloml, WIiIUi Amendment to CuiiMltmlon Would Call for 3,MK).MK) Sulum, Orr., Mar. iil. Nliio mean Uru. rolorrod lu tho people by lliu liuil ItiKlntikliirv, have been placed up on ilio bullol tor a spodul uluclluu lo be bold Julio 3, lu Oivgou. These moimiiron ri-flont tho work of the luwmukura during Dm til-Uiiy session mid ombraco niodt of the subjects upou which nriiuuniB waxed warm in both legislative Iioiimih. "Highway work and the ousting of uu alleged patout paving trust," from control of such construction, iitatu aid of var ious kind for returned soldiers and Million, reconstruction work and bulldliiK of MlruoUirs for state needs, as a iiicmis or eiuplo) lug discharged soldiers and war workoin, ami Irriga tion and reclamation legislation these were tho imuiu upou which forensic fights wore waged In legls lullve hulls. Thine subjects arc In cluded lu ilia nluo roforondum meas ures, which are uu follow. A proposed appropriation of $2. DUO, 000, contingent uiKin the aipro lrlatlon by the federal government of a like amount, to assist the Unit ed ttt government In construct lns a -military highway from tbo city of Astoria, tliroimh Clatsop, Tilla mook. Lincoln, l-ino. Douglas. Coos and Curry counties, of' Oregon and to tho California lino. A constitutional amendment to permit tho bonding of Oregon for 15,01)0,000 for the promotion of re count ruction, reclamation and land settlement project. A .proponed law providing that honorably discharged soldiers, sail ors and marine from Oregon may attend any .private or public Instltu tlon of lenrnlnR 1n tho Htnto and have their necessary expense not to exceed $25 per montli pnld by the Into for four years. A constitutional amendment for the construction of slate market roads under supervision of the coun ty court. A bill , to bond tho rtato for $5,. 000.000 for reconstruction work, In cluding construction or hospitals at Portland and Salem, and other state buildings at CorvalllB. Eugene, Mon mouth, Pendleton. Astorln, Marsh . field, Ilakor, Bond, La Grande and Modford: to dovelop reclamation projects on arid, swamp and logged off lands, building a now peniten tiary and to iprovldo settlement of land by discharged soldior. A constitutional amendment pro posing payment by tho state of Irri gation and dralnnge district bond In terest for the first five years by is suing state bonds, on condition that euch district are found to comply with required conditions. A constitutional amendment to raise the iprosent 2 per cent, limita tion placed upon counties for creat ing debts for permanent roads. A constitutional amendment to iprovldo for a nontenant governor, which office does not now exist In Oregon. A constitutional amendment to (permit tho erection of a reconstruc tion hospital In Portland. Tl'ItK ECONOMIC SITUATION IS REPORTED AS IMPROVING Constantonoplo, Mar. 25 Trial or 1he lenders of the committee of union and 'progress has begun and several of the former Turkish states men have been summoned to appear 1n court. Arrests of young Turk leaders still continue. The economic situation here Is improving gradu TWO I BONDING ,v'4 , fi"JNZi-l'yH' J(K'''"XK ; OOUXTV. RnMlRKIN HI GREAT PLAN Are Flooding Congressmen Willi I'e 1 It lull Aklll for GoVrtt'lllllcllt Ownership of All Lines WiuihlDRlon, Mur. 25. A systema tic attempt by organized lubor to put through government ownursblp and operation of rullronda has begun with petitions being received by mombers of the home and sonate. Tbe petitions, all similar, uro being received from all over the country, and when the xHal session of con grona Is called by President Wiltton noiiKroHBini'ii oxpunt to bo deliiRed by the memorials. The wordlnR of the statement fol lows: "We, the undcrslRtied cltl.ens. re spertfully urwed upon you, and throtiRh tho conureHs f the t'nlled KUttcs, lo have enacted Into law a hill simitar or identical with II. It. lOfiflO, providing for the national ownership and government opera tion or nil railroads within the terri tory of the I'nltod Stales and Its pos siSKlons, necessary for tho furnish ing of transportation to the people of the 1'nlted States, Including all lands, terminals and equipment re quired or desirable for successful oHratlon, and that you will cause this petition to he noted In the Con gressional llecord and referred to an appropriate committee." JDF GREAT WOOL CLIP Ixindon, Mur. 25. The wool trade of C.reat Ilrltatn. which has been controlled by the government since tho. middle of 1916, Is gradually be ing freed from restrictions and soon will bo practically on a pre-war ba sis. Tbe only remaining restriction will be thnt the government, which has bought the forthcoming Austral- Ian clip, will nt as merchants and put this on the marmot at auctions at 'fixed minimum prices, which, however, will lie somewhat elastic as tho sales proceed. Tho first auctions will be held In tho first week of April and about SO. 000 bales are expected to he cat alogued during that month. Belgian Kronch and Italian buyers will be allowed to compete with the British trade for supplies but there will be no American competition. SPAIN PLACED UNDER- T Madrid, Mnr. 25. Martial law- was proclaimed here today. It Is un derstood that the constitutional guarantee may be suspended throughout Spain. There is a general strike at Barce lona. Premier Ilomanones, who In tended toeslgn, bus announced that ho considers it his duty to remain In office. BEST COW IN TEST GAVE 1512 POUNDS OF MILK Corvnllls, Mar. 25. The 000 cows tovtod In Oregon In November aver aged 55C pounds 'of milk carrying 27.15 (Miunds Tat. Tho best herd avorngod 779 -pounds of milk with 45.88 .pounds fat. Tho' best cow gnvo 1512 ipounds of milk carrying 75.00 pounds fat. Her record In milk 'was 2 Vt tlnies and In Tat al most three times that of the average 000 cows. Yet the 600 were bettor than the avorage untested cow, six of the poorest havjng been sent to the butcher for being no better. E. U Wstover oTvthe agricultural col lege 'has choge of the testing. DEATH TO ALL WHO RESISTTHE B HI Hltll IS TIIK OltUKIt ISHI KI) AT III DAI'KHT WIIKIiH KHKVt II MAY HR DISAIIMKI) ALLIED MISSIONS MM LEAVE; llrltlsh Monitors I ndcr Fire, Hut It Is Doubtful If Hungary Has De , clan-d War on Itoumanla Paris, Mar. 25. L'noffiiial report from Budapest state that the allied missions there are debating on the advisability of leaving, and the dis armament of French troops In that city la being considered. Order iirevalls and as yet no In- Jury has been done foreigners. Mar tial law- has been declared and the death ponalty has been prescribed for armed resistance to the Bolshe vik!, and for robbery and looting. Two British monitors are report ed to have arrived at Budapest, hav ing been under fire on their way up tho Danube. Other British and French vessels were near. A British patrol boat was seized by the author ities but returned with apologies by the government. Rumors that Hungary has declar ed war on Roumanla, Czacho-Slo- vnkla and Jugo-Slavla are said to be extremely doubtful. Vienna, Mar. 25. All members of the allied missions In Budapest have been Interned, including Colonel Vlx, chief of tho French mission, ac cording to travelers arriving here from Budapest. L BE Uhea Luper, assistant supervisor of water masters of the state water board arrived In this city this morn ing. He. with M. L. Qpdyke, will leave for the Sucker creek country In the morning where they will re arrange the distribution of the water of that stream used for irrigation purposes in accordance with the re commendations of the district water master. Matiy ditches will be consolidated. and some abandoned and other changes made which will be the means of conserving the water sup ply and benefitting the farmers of that district. A survey of this district was made last fall by the state relative to the Inchoat rights on Sucker creek, and beginning April 3. Mr. Luier will hold hearings pertaining to these rights. The adjudication of Sucker creek is completed and .water right certif icates are being Issued by the state water board, and as soon as the henr lngs on the Inchont rights are com pleted certificates wilj be Issued for these rights' which will finish the adjudication of that stream. Mr. Opdyke states that certifi cates are Also being Issued on the adjudicated rights of . Althouse. ATTORNEY GENERAL BAYS OLOOTT SERVES 4 YEARS Salem. Ore.. Mar. 25. Governor Olcott is entitled to serve the full four years of the unexpired term or the late Governor Withycombe. He likewise has authority to resl mi as secretary of state and appoint his successor to that office without jeop ardising his right to remain as gov ernor of Oregon. These re tbe salient features of a sweeiping opinion handed down by Attorney-General Brown. The opin ion was given at the request of Gov ernor Olcott. ORKOOX, TUESDAY, MARCH HUNGARIAN K GAIN MANY ALLIES PROPAGANDA. APPEALS TO GEK-MAN-Al'HTHIA AND NON-SO. t'l. LISTS WHO FAVOR RKI8 BOLSHEVIK ARMY KEABS HUNGARY Jugo-Hlnv Delegates at Peace Confer, cure Fi-ur Their Country Will Be come Involved In Outbreak Paris, Mar. 25. Conditions in Hungary seem to have affected Ger man-Austria. Advices to the Amer ican peace conference- delegates from private agents in Vienna Indicate the existence of a threatening state of affairs there. Vienna. Mar. 25 A dispatch from Hungary declares that all the non socialist parties there will support the new government for the reason that it has decided to act against the entente rural population which Is re ported to have gone over to tbe com munists. Copenhagen, Mar. 25. Claims of the Hungarian soviet government to power, as set forth "In its wireless communications, are largely untrue, according to a Vienna dispatch. A panic prevails in Budapest but the country Is not yet resolved upon a soviet republic. Paris, Mat., 25. The Jugo-Slav delegates took a pessimistic view of tho situation of their country and Poland and Roumanla. They said those countries are likely to be af fected by the Bolehevlkl revolution in Hungary. Berne, Mar. 25. A Bolshevik army which is on Its way to Hun gary has reached Brody. 50 miles east of Lemberg, it Is reported. I. W. W. TRY THE "FAST" METHOD OF EVADING LAW Topeka, an.. Mar. 25. Although growing pal? and thin as the result of their five days' fast, 12 alleged T. W. W. members held In the coun ty jail here continue today to refuse all food offered them. . . WAY TO CIVIC PEACE Omsk, Siberia, Mar. 25. Russia's best diplomat is its army, in the opinion of G. K. Ginns, vice-minis ter for foreign affairs of the All-Rus-. stan government discussing the po litical situation with tbe correspon dent of the Associated Press. Mr. Gins is one of the group of young men who have thrown in their lot with the new ministry and who are determined that this experiment of founding a successful government shall jrove a success. Mr. Gins was formerly a profes sor of International law In the Uni versity of Petrograd. With his wife and two children he was one of that numerous band of Russians who were obliged to flee easterly to es cape tho scourage of bolshevlsm and terrorism. ' Tho young diplomat thought that the powers would see in Russia's re generated army, as shown by the taking of Perm, the symptoms of the rebirth or the state and evidence that the state Is fully able to pro tect Itself. -. There was- no doubt In his mind about the friendly dispo sition of the allies. Mr. Gins sold: "Foreign powers are looking for a steady government supported by the public opinion of the whole nation and now, I believe, they have found it. We are on the way to civic peace." 28, lttl. SENATOR'S POIR E Pcac Confcreees Consider Lodge. Txmdon Papyrs Ilhimo Delicate for Spread of IloIkhevUin Paris, Mar. 25. The league of na tions commission considering the proposed amendments to the cove nant last night disposed tentatively of the first 18 seotlops, and agreed on the number of changes In form which members of tho commission believe will meet over half, the ob jections offered by Senator Lodge and other American senators. Presi dent Wilson attended the meeting. The Monroe Doctrine amendments will be made Wednesday. London. Mar. 25. The morn In r newspapers unanimously charge the Paris peace conference with respon sibility for Hungary's embracing Doishevism and general dissatisfac tion over the delay of peace. The newspapers accuse the conferees of delaying peace while idealists are "following a will-o'the-wlsp called the league of nations." Paris. Mar. 25. Reports have reached the conference that inter allied troopi will be landed at Spa lato, on the Dalmatian coast, be cause of disorders there and for fear of graver troubles. The Hun sartans are reported to be trying t. spread bolshevlsm to that part of the Adriatic coast, which they formerly controlled. IRK FOR OLD WAGES Washington, Mar. 25. No waee increases will be provided in the new working agreement to become effec tive next month between the Pacific -oast eht"bullders and union metal trades union. It is announced by Sec retary Berres of the metal trades de partment of the federation of labor. Coblenz, ' Mar. 25. German pho tographers in Ooblenz recently have been doing the largest business in their careers, their principal custo mers being American soldiers. From two to five thousand. Americans of units In districts beyond the Rhine and other parts of the occupied area Visit Coblenz daily, the soldiers be ing allowed one day in the city every few weeks: Hundreds of these men have their photographs taken . In their display windows the pho tographers have arranged the pic tures of Americans on one sWe and likenesses of German civilians and soldiers on the other, always with a dividing line of some kind in be tween. SOF Coblenz, Mar. 25. There is -no longer any set standard for the strength of the , German army, say American experts. This Is regarded as important In view of the fact that delogaites at the peace conference not long ago suggested that the Ger man army be limited to six divisions. At the beginning of the war a Ger man division comprised about 16,000 men. In the latter part of the war the divisions consisted of three in fantry and one artillery regiments, with pioneers, signalmen and var ious other technical troops number- lug approximately 9,000 men. At present, it Is declared, no division In the German army has 5.000 men and there are probably divisions FEARED BY LEAGU wijn less than 1,000 men. WHOLE XrMBEH 261. OLD CHANNEL IS SUCK IN WALDO MINE MUCH COARSE GOLD IS FOCXD IN THE ORIGINAL CHANNEL GRAVEL ELEVATED 89 FEET George M. Esterly, Purchaser of Pro perty, Plan Installation of Much More Equipment The original "old channel" or bed of the ancient river, tbe dream of which has caused many .a weary prospector to renew the search, has been discovered in the Eeterly mine' at Waldo, and one giant is now operating in gravel carrying a -plen tiful supply of course gold. , . Last week a pit ' was piped to a , depth of 22 feet below the level of former workings, at a point between two benches of bed rock which had previously been uncovered. This pit opened up a bed of gravel entire- ' ly different in character from - that clay banks which have proved Im mensely , profitable during the past 50 years of active operation of the mine. The depth of -this gravel has not yet been determined as no' test ing nag been done in this particular spot, although a hundred prospect shafts had been sunk during the pre liminary investigation of the proper ty. -No cleanup has yet been made to base an estimate of the values car ried but enough panning lias -been done to show high values. ' Heretofore the gold secured at this mine baa been fine and flour gold and was evenly distributed through the clay banks which ranged from 15 to 35 feet. This property, formerly known as the Logan mine, and the Simmons mine, lias been a profitable producer tor more than 60 years. : It - now consists of 4,200 acres, practically all of which Is pay dirt. With It is a water right of 14,000 inches. Water for mining is supplied by a system of ditches totaling 25 miles In length. , ' This property was purchased in September, 1916, at a cost of $140, 000 from James Logan, who had successfully operated It for many years. The lack of sufficient grade for the dumping of tailings led to the installation of a hydraulic elevator system, the tailings being carried up 73 feet by two elevators. The in stallation of a third elevator last week carries the tailings a total dis tance of 89 feet above the pit Just opened. All the standard placer gold sav ings devices are in use, yet owing to the fineness of the gold much of it is carried over In the tailings. Mr. Esterly proposes to install during the coming season an invention of his own called a water classifier, and which he Is confident will recover 90 per cent of the values. It Is pro posed to do away with the elevator system by opening a race to the west fork of the Illinois river. This race will require 700-foot tunnel through serpentine.- The elimination of the hydraulic elevator system will re lease for actual mining a volume of water several times that now used. The expense of these improvements is estimated at from $40,O0Q to $50, 000. The dally capacity of the mine Is 1,000 cubic yards, at an average cost of less than 6 cents, but when the contemplated improvements are made the capacity will be much greater with a reduction .of opera tion cost to about cent per yard. The mine is In onernHnn rt.iv and j night for eight months In the year, a battery of nine 2,000-candle power search lights, and many 1,000-candIe lrnvi IVHQi: llguut lUUHUIg. UlgUt work possible. , . . ,