T3 jcamsai nxzs pgei OCECOII DOTES News la Grief, Gathered Pros Varieu Parts sf The State. Eugene win soon have a commercial airplane of. its own. . . . E. F. Slade, examiner In the atatt tanking department baa resigned. The peach crop ot Clackamas coun ty Is the largest known for many years. ' A campaign will be made to enroll 600 new members In the Salem Com mercial club. . . v Fifteen hundred students are count ed on to enroll at the University of Oregon this fall. ? , A total of $2,082,000 was paid to resi dents of Oregon last year by life in surance companies. . Duerst brothers of Sheridan received a check of $22,000 for their crop of wheat and oats from a local miller. A large vein of coal three feet in 'thickness has been discovered In the . Warm Springs reservation country. Frank Campbell, a prominent Insur ance man of Eugene, died In San Francisco, following a minor opera tion, v ' " ; ' - .' Returned service men of Redmond, have effected an organization and ap plied for a charter in the American .Legion. A rich ledge of gold assaying $10,000 a ton has been uncovered on Rose creek In the southern part of Coos county. ' Because of a change in the' schedule ot the presidential train, President Wilson will not be able to make a stop at Salem. The United States government has awarded a contract for 20,000 barrels ,r- " Pendleton roller mills. ' Mrs. Mary Jane Heater, who came to Oregon with the overland Immigra tion of 1860, died at her home near Springbrook, aged 80 years. ' Ross Hickernell, the new Instructor on the cornet in the school of music at the University of Oregon, arrived in Eugene from Warren, O. Heppner lodge of Elks awarded their contract to L. N. Traver of Port land for the construction. of the new lodge building to cost $39,900. Army goods at army prices will be offered to the people of Portland at a retail store to be Opened by the Uni ted States army September 25. The second annual convention of the International Association of Fire Fighters convened in Portland Mon day and-continued until Saturday. - The monthly financial statement just issued by the state Industrial ac cident commission shows a balance in the accident fund of $1,114,014.69. There was a total of 623 accidents In Oregon during the week ending Sep tember 4, according to a report issued y the industrial accident commission. - The electric light plant at Florence at the mouth of the Siuslaw -river was destroyed by fire and the town will be In darkness for some time to come. General celebration and observance of "constitution day" on Wednesday, September 17, throughout the state- Is urged In a letter issued by Governor Olcott : Workers , in the steel shipbuilding plants of Portland will receive an in crease of 8 cents an hour in all the crafts and a 44-hour week will be granted them. T s '.-"" . Miss Belle Grover, dean of women at McMinnvllle college, died in Seattle last week. She had gone to Seattle to take a special course at the Wash ington university. - : - j Permanent organisation at aa as-i sedation to bold annual fairs in Al bany was effected at the meeting of Unn representatives from various part of the county. Amos Nichols, resident ot Linn county tor 45 years, died at the home of his ton, James Nichols, near Plain view, aged 93 years. He was a veter an of the Civil war. - The flagship Birmingham, a veteran cruiser of 21 months' service in for eign waters, and a squadron of six torpedo boat destroyers, paid a five day visit to Portland. . Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels arrived in Portland Tuesday after spending Monday afternoon vis iting the proposed naval base site at Tongue Point, near Astoria, Hood River Knights of .' Pythias lodge has employed C. H. SchulU, for merly a member of a San Francisco orchestra, to instruct a band just or ganised by the fraternal body. Dr. B. R. Wallace of Albany has been appointed examiner for Linn county for the bureau of war risk insurance and is examining Linn county dis charged soldiers with disability rec ords. ;'"'.-. " ' As the result of a vote taken at a session of the Portland fair price com mittee, letters will be sent the Oregon delegation in Washington, D. C, urg ing that steps be taken to reinstate war-time food regulations requiring licensing of dealers and limiting pro fits'.. f ; '-" An average of 703 names are called for daily a the general delivery win dow of the Bend postoffice, according to the count kept last week. In ad dition, there are 745 rented mall boxes. " Jerome S. Workman, formerly sec retary of the Eugene chamber of Com merce and leader in patriotic work during the war, has gone to Wood burn, where he has purchased a farm. At a meeting held at Coquille, at tended by a large number of repre sentative citizens from, various parts ot the county, the Coos County Li brary ' association was permanently organized. The use of the Portland municipal auditorium for a debate on ihe Irish republic, to have been held under the auspices of the Central Labor council, was denied by the unanimous vote of the city council. ' The dreadnought Vermont, carrying Vice-Admiral Clarence S. Williams, second in command of . the Pacific fleet, and the armored cruiser North Carolina entered the Columbia river and visited Astoria. . Systematic placarding of the detour roads, made necessary because of the improvement of the main trunk lines now in progress throughout Oregon, has been undertaken by the itate highway department. plans for a no-accident week cam paign to be conducted in the state of Oregon are being formulated by the newly organized Oregon safety coun cil, and it is expected the drive will take place next month. . With sugar stocks practically clean ed out and Portland jobbers expecting no shipments tor another month or more, if consumers' supplies are not used sparingly there will be a real ugar famine in Portland soon. Hearings will be held at TmaIo September 12 and 13 by George Coch rane, state water superintendent, for the adjudication of the water rights on Snow creek. Approximately 1000 acres of irrigable land are affected. BE A LEADER An immense problem in reconstruction confronts the present generation. - Art you doing your utmost to prepare to lead in it solution? 1 e ' ! Oregon Agricultural College Tnim fct hiaiMa la tin luiimriw and wofmiuia m IbWww i HOMB ttONOMica. aoriculturb, commbrcb, forestry, pharmacy, music. VOC1TIBH1L IDUCtTIOH. CIVIL KNOINURINO. RLRCTR1CAL BNQINBKRINO. MkCNANICAI. ENOIK"RIHO. CHEMICAL RNOINSBRtNO, INDUSTRIAL AtfTS, MIMIMO BNOINMUNO, LOOOINO BNQIMBSKINO, MILITARY BGIBNCB. Tk CtStw trtlatae Inctadw ewifiil la Bnah, EmmmIm, AM, MttkMUtk. Madura Lnauutt. Pkyaic.1 UiicmIm, Intimritl Jwnnltm. Httural ScitMM, 4 til tMM 4 M d notion, Three regular terms Pall term begins September 22, 1919 For Celbet CMalae, ISurtratid BoekWt tad tthw IntemMiot ddrm . TH RMtRAR.OroAeNcuhttftlCollet.CviUlt VERBOORT WOMAN IN LAST RESTING PLACE Mrs. F. F. Lahaie, who has been ill since April of last year, but only bed fast for two days, passed away at her home in Verboort Saturday of last week. She was the mother of eight living children, and besides these children she leaves a devoted husband. Seven of her children weYe at her bedside at the time of her death, the other son being in the Na vy in New London, Conn. She was born in Province Quebec, February 10, 1852, and was married in Ottawa, Ont., Aug. 26, 1873. They left Canada in 1880, going to Wis consin. In 1882 they Te't there and went to South Dakota and remained there for ten years, going next to Saskatchewan, Canada, leav- there in 1894 overlanu for Oregon, where they have since resided, living in Washington County J 4 years. Fath er VanClarenbock, of Verboort, con ducted the funeral service and the re matfis were laid to rest Tuesday, Sept., 9th in the Verboort serr.etory. "What's the matter with the Amer ican dollar?" inquires an anxious critic. Nothing, nothing at all. A dollar is a dollar, and is worth a hun dred cents no more, and no less. Bu)t inflated prices have made its purchasing power or ly about one half what it has a few years ago. Swat the price booster, and the dol lar will perk up again. Judging from his published photo graphs, if Lieut. Col. Theodore Roose velt, Jr., is as smart aa he is homely he will be a fitting successor to his brainy dad of the Big Stick. Our. returned soldiers are naively remarking that when the next war breaks out the proper thing will be to aend the fellows who remained at home this time. Before buying a tractor investigate the 10 20 tan Manufactured by International Harvester Company Two Cylinder, Kerosene Burner,, making 500. revolutions per minute. Four wheels on the land and no side draft. Weight 5,700 lbs. Price $1,130 Dornard Stipo Beaverton, Oregon