, OUR SLOGAN 100 Hens Two Brood Sows and Five Cows on every 40 JOTS THE FARM BUREAU Farmers of Malheur County the Farm Bureau is working for your interests. Sen4 ia your Bteaibersaia today. . - ro in iana in ine ntrm- yr- . Springs District . ft. - . r t j . i . VOL. XVIII. NO. 7. VALE, OREGON, SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922. SUBSCRIPTION $2.00 PER YEAR E SOLD ATJPREMIIIM Ontario National Bank Bids in Block of Road Bonds Seven Bids Above Par Offered County Malheur county received a nice premium on the block of $130,000 of road bonds which were sold the first of this week to the Ontario Na tional bank. The sum of $2,737.80 above par value of the bonds was offered by the Ontario financial concern and its bid being the high est was accepted by the court. The bids offered for the bonds in dicate the high tone of the bond market and show the desirability pf bonds of the character which the county just sold. Following are the bids and amuunt of premium offered: Citi zens Bank of Portland, $1000; E. H Rollins & Sons of Portland, $1001; Clark-Kendall of Portland, $1368; Lumberman's Trust company of Portland ,$1897; Ontario National bank, $2737.80; Palmer Bond and Mortgage Company of Salt Lake, $847; Ferris & Hargrave, of Spo kane, $556. The sum of $80,000 has been pledged by the county to the state highway commission for the coun ty's part of road work which is al ready under way and that amount of the money received from the bond sale will be turned over to the commission. ine rest or the bond money- or $50,000 was voted by the people at the election which authorized those bonds for road work from Nyssa to Jordan Valley and that is where it will be spent, according to County Judge E. H. . Test. That official asserted the county would proceed with the construction of the Nyssa Jordan Valley road this year. DOG LiCENSfTUPHELO SUPREME COURT DECISION MAY HAVE FAR REACHING EFFECT UPON TAXES. Far reaching complications of the double taxation question are pre dicted by some Malheur county men because of the decision handed down this week by the Supreme Court making valid the dog license fee. The law was upheld in the suit brought against its validity by Col onel E. Hofer of Salem, who now de clares he is not through with the law but will' place its repeal before the people at an election. The dog license law has never been' popular in Malheur county be cause the stockmen and particularly the sheepmen must maintain quite a band' of dogs to assist in taking care of their stock and they have always contended they were being forced to pay 'a double taxation as the dogs are entered as personal property on the tax roll. ' "If it is legitimate for the state to collect a license fee from dogs and at the same . time levy taxes against them I see no reason why the same thing cannot be done with automobiles," said ' Ex-county Judge George W. McKnight. . "In my opin ion the - decision of the supreme court; makes that; legal ' and there will be an awful howl go up ' over the state when that is done. I think the decision of the supreme court will have a very far reaching effect before its influence upon other tax ation ' matters other than ' that of dogs has ceased." County Assessor Andrew 1 ' M. Graham is of the opinion that the1 decision .. makes ' it permlssable to place automobiles upon the tax rolls for taxation and he is going to take the matter up at once with the State Tax commission and, unless stopped by that body, will assess automo biles this year. County Clerk H. S. Sackett has not collected dog licenses since the first of the year because of the pending suit before the supreme court, but the decision upholding the law makes it necessary for all own ers of dogs to pay their license fees again this year. FIVE ELKS ATTEND CEREMONY Five Vale Elks, L. J. Hadley,. F. B. Zutz, R. N, Simmonds, II. G. Kennard and Lloyd Riches, attended tho ceremony in Weiser Wednesday evening when a class of twenty can didates were initiated into the order by the Nam pa lodge. The Eastern Stars held a regu lar business meeting one evening last week. Nothing of great , im portance was accomplished. Stewart Hannah, who reside mar Wentfall, tpent this week of court at Vale. Mrs. I. B. Quiit-nberry returned tho last cf this week from Portland, where she has ten for sum tlm. COUNTY BONDS AD Attempts to Side Step Agreement Highway.. Commission.. Says.. Road Work in County During 1922. No Action was taken a few days ago by the state highway commission re garding the survey of the Central Oregon Highway west of the Vale Burrelle section which indicates that the commission- is trying to side step the agreement made to the county court some time ago on the construction of the Old Oregon Trail. County Judge Test has requested that the survey "be made and the commission wrote to- Judge Test this week asserting it did not see its way clear to do this, unless the county wanted to pay half of the cost, because the construction of the Old Oregon Trail would take all of Malheur county's share of state road money for 1922. "This Is contrary to the agree ment made with the county when the Old Oregon" Trail was definitely decided upon,' said County Judge Test. "Chairman Booth himself made the statement to our delega tion that the money for the Old Ore gon Trail work had already been provided for. And the court inter preted this to mean that this work would not be charged against the 1922 share of road money which Mainour county has justly coming to it. I shall take the matter up immediately with the commission.1 TWELVE HORSES DROWNED Herd Breaks Through When Driven Across the Ice Twelve valuable horses belonging to Rutherford Brothers of Malheur drowned in Reservoir No. 3 Satur day. The horses were driven by three men who were riding for Ru- tnertord mothers, and they sup posed there was no danger in cross ing the reservoir as it was frozen over and covered with snow. After venturing several yards on ' the thin ice it gave way and the horses went through the ice. Luckily the horse men had bnly reached the brink of the reservoir or they probably would have lost their lives. STATE CHAMBER ACTIVE ORGANIZATION WOULD COM BINE ALL COLONIZATION WORK UNDER ONE HEAD. The Oregon State Chamber of Commerce will continue its active work in colonizing and settling the unoccupied land of the state, and will bend every effort toward the merging of all land settlement lgencies throughout the state during ihe coming year, according to an outline of the future policy of the Tganization made public at Portland his. week. i , - . The report, which is the outgrowth f the annual meeting of the or ganization on January 3, empha sizes the fact that the State Cham ber, due to the active cooperation of .he railroads serving this state, ex ecutive departments at Salem, and all state-wide organizations, has be come established as the centra me--!ium through which prospective set tlers are put in touch with the vari ous' districts of the state in which they desire to locate. An important development in the State Chamber's plan of placing ex, ''oldiers oh the land under the pro visions of the Oregon bonus law, was announced in the report. Robert Q. Case of the State ' Chamber, an ix-service man, has been appointed secretary of the State Land ComT mittee of the American Legion,' and will immediately take up the , work of compiling data in regard to. spe cific tracts of land available for sol. Jier settlement. ' Thomas A. Sweeney, chairman of che State Land Committee of the American Legion, in announcing the appointment of the secretary, de clared that the committee would take up the active work of soldier settlement through the State Cham ber. "Oregon ex-soldiers who desire to ua the bonus as a means of buying a home should address the American Legion State Land Committee, Ore gon building, Portland," said Mr. Sweeney. "We expect to work closely with the State Chamber in this matter, as that organization has complete data on file relative to the various tracts of land ready for settlement." Other matters taken up in the re port include the announcement that a new departm-nt of Organization, and Service, as recommended by the State Association of Commercial Secretaries, wi'l e Ink; itutcd by the State Chamber. ' The juu'P'" f department will be, to ' give aesist- ance to. local eowmercial org'lZ " U V , , , tlons throughout the state, and a'f Xhe (u"Uon ' ' u k"'P" field man w.ll be employed who will I P . u"ri mP ' tother devote his entire time to this work.!1"1 e,t ''"" n,i ' the "rv- Mrs. Kate Long visited In Vale (hit week. NICHOLS TRIAL FOR MURDER SET JAN.30 Five Criminal Cases Are Disposed of This Week One Trial and Conviction; Three Plead Guilty Archie Nichols, buckaroo, indicted last week. by the' grand jury of mur der in, the first degree, .will go on trial for his life in the circuit court of Malheur "tounty before Judge Dalton Biggs,1" beginning ' Monday, January 30. District Attorney R. D. Lytle will prosecute the case and J. W. McCulloch, of Ontario, will de fend -Nichols. Nichols" is'. charged with shooting William Hicks at' Jordan Valley sev eral weeks during a brawl in which Hicks was fighting with Jim Mills in an old cellar. This is the third murdes trial to bo held before Judge Biggs during the last IS months. . Five of the criminal cases . on the docket for this term of court were disposed of this week, one by trial and conviction three by pleas of guilty and one by dismissal. Howard Samuel fierce was con victed of robbing" Wilson Brothers store at Nyssa. He was prosecuted by District Attorney Lytle and rep resented in trial'-- by ChaSv K. Cran- dall. At the time rierce was ar rested in Salt Lake City, Arthur Hall, was taken .also and charged with ' participation in' the crime. But at the time of trial the state was un able to locate the only witness who could connect Hall with the crime and the only way the state could connect in any; way Was simply evi dence that 'Hall ' had some of the stolen goods in his possession at Salt Lake. It was necessary for the case against Hall to be dismissed. Manual Montaya, indicted for lar ceny in a store; hidward McEvoy, indicted of larceny of a Ford; and Robert H. LeRoy, indicted for assault with a dangerous wrapon, all pled guilty to the charges against them. f our criminal cases remain to be fried and the first one,; that of' State vs. Howard Camp, will come up for trial Tuesday, January 17. EFFECTIVE RABBIT POISONING Great Work Being Done By Mallett County; ; - The jack rabbits are being dealt with severely by the farmers of the, Mallett district through an organize" campaign going on there under the direction of Committeeman . Foiles, in cooperation with the county farm bureau.-- Rabbits are being poisoned by the hundreds, and those leading the battle hope to put the pest to rout in such a manner, as to cut the loss of hay in stacks .this winter, to minimum. . Already the commu nity has pooled orders to purchase 29 ounces i of strychnine from the county agent, at the special price made possible through , the rodent control revolving fund, aruj they have secured, an equal .quantity of poison without cost from the Biological Sur vey donation to the farm bureau to assist communities which " make cleanup campaigns. This work is also in progress in several other communities and a number of, in dividuals are posoningi rabbits in various parts of the,- county with strychnine secured from; the county agent. j . ' , E WOULD ELIMINATE: COMPETI TION BETWEEN CITIES OF NORTHWEST. At a meeting in Spokane early this week held by representatives of municipalities and commercial ' or ganizations throughout the north west it was decided' to start a cam paign to make the auto tourist camps in the northwest as uniform as possible. Such a plan, if carried out, will benefit the entire northwest, accord ing to men who have given-the sub ject considerable study. "It .will eliminate the competition ". between r.ome pf the cities that are supply ing many fancy frills at their tour ist camps in order to draw the tour ist from the neighboring town. A uniform charge of 50 cents a night was decided upon at the meeting and it was decided that this money tihoul -represent service in ,the form of caretaker, lights an fuel. The Enterprise poposed a plan like this months ago after on in campH had been made by the editor, camps' had been made by the edditor. And at, that time the city was urged to take steps to make the service at the Vale tourist camp conform with that of other, camps in the north- a .1 ..I iL! . I . Ire I made uniform and marge made, as thtr cities are going U do, tb camp will take car of Iulf. B-r-r-r Says Vale This Winter Week First Really Col1 Weather Winter Grips Malheur County Now. of Old Man Winter blew his frosty breath upon the thermometers in Malheur county this week and the little red mercury scurried to cover in its round nest below. The government thesmometer reg istered five degrees below zero Wed nesday morning. This is the first zero weather of the winter. It has lasted all week. . Only a small blanket of snow cov ers the low lands in the northern part of the county but back in the hills the snow increases until sev eral feet cover the grounds in the mountains. LAND SUIT LONG DRAWN SUIT TO RECOVER DITCH STOCK TAKES UP EVENINGS OF COURT. ! Every night this week the circuit court has been taken up with ses sions of the suit brought by the Ore gon & Western Colonization Com pnny - against the Eastern Oregon Land Company to recover 850 shares of ditch stock in the Ontario-Nyssa Ditch Company, commonly known as the Shoestring ditch. The suit began on Monday but it was appar ent it could not be ended in time for other cases which were set for trial so it has been continued each evening of the week. Thursday evening the contending parties asked for an adjournment to talk over the tangle and it was thought probable the ' ease might be settled out of court. According to the allegations of the plaintiff corporation, it deliver ed to the defendant 850 shares of ditch stock with the understanding they, , the defendants, would apply water to lands, improve the lands and sell them and pay the plaintiffs from the proceeds obtained from the sale of these lands. Contrary to agreement, the plain tiff further avers, the defendants are not offering the lands for sale but are retaining them and using the ditch stock at the ""same time. The value of the stock is $25 a share. LETTUCE MEETING SOON FARMERS INTERESTED IN HEAD LETTUCE GROWING WILL GATHER AT ONTARIO. There will be a meeting to take up the growing of head lettuce -at Ontario on Friday, January 20th, beginning at 10 a. m; Mr. E. R. Bennett, who is the Idaho special ist on this line of work, and Mr. R. II. Young and Mr. Lee Johnson, both practical growers of Canyon county, have been invited to speak on various divisions of the subject. The meeting will be held in the city hall and it is expected that the room will be packed with farmers who are interested in getting into the. head lettuce game, as there is a great deal of interest in the propo sition at present owing to the great success and large profits made du ring the past few years by head lettuce growers in different places in Idaho. The meeting Is being arranged by County Agent Breithaupt in coop eration with the county farm bureau department of truck and vegetable crops of which G. W. Lattig is the chairman. Invitations have been ex ended to growers from adjoininng counties to be present and all farm ers or- others interested in the sub ject in Malheur county are invited. The program will deal mostly with production methods. At recent meeting on head let tuce growing held in Caldwell over one thousand persons were in at tendance. It is estimated that suf ficient acreage will be panted to make 1000 acres of the product next year to be shipped from southern Idaho and Malheur county. That the market for this is assured seems to be the opinion of those who have been in the game for om time, provided the growers specialize on quality and continue to hold the pre mium advantages they have gained on the eastern markets. - There are good many fancy points on grow ing head lettuce little understood by persons who have not had experi ence, a number of which will prob ably be brought out next Friday. BUSINESS CIIANCK8 HANDS. F. J. Wynne of Bend arrived in Vale this week to take over the Vale Cleaning Works, . which he has leased from J. W, Duntey,' with . i option to buy at the end of the lease. Mrs.1 Wynne accompanied her Bus band but their two child re a will re main In Bend until school is out. - E. Rogers and son Davs and Guy Travis were vUitors from Crouton this wk. U T HIGHWAY BY 1925 Grant County Judge Asks Help of Vale In Forcing Early Completion of This Trans-State Hif hway County Judge Orin . L. ' Patterson of Grant county, is asking that Vale get behind the completion of the John Day highway and assist Grant county , in its. efforts fr the com pletion of this trans-s: ite highway before 1925.. In a letter to . Judge George E. Davis, of Vale, Judure Patterson says the units between Prairie City and the forest line on Dixie moun tain have . been surveyed and that crews are working on the survey from Cole's bridge to the Valade ranch and they hope to have these units under construction , by next season. The Forest service is sur veying the mountain unit - from Huckleberry Flat to Unity. , In Malhur county the John Day highway is well under way. , The first 2G miles out of Valo ts Brogan will be completed early next season as all that remains to - be done is graveling the stretch between Jamie son and Brogan. The road has been graded from Brogan to Cow Valley and county officials believe - the stule highway department will see tho' justice of graveling this stretch next season bcause the costly grading work will be wasted before long unless a sur face is put on the road. It is cut ting up in stretches very badly this winter. Conditions look favorable for the completion of this highway within a few years. DAIRY CLUBS PROGRESS BOYS AND GIRLS OF SEVERAL COMMUNITIES ' MAKING GOOD HEADWAY. " v. Seventy-three club members of Malheur county are keeping records on at least two dairy cows apiece. The records include . the weight of the milk, the test - of the milk and the amount of feed consumed. These club members are only acquiring that knowledge necessary to the successful dairyman but are render ing a very real service to Malheur county. .' - '-, s t The farmer, the merchant and the banker with the help , of the War Finance Corporation- Bi- interested in bringing -dairy' Cows into -this county. . The boys and girls are do ing their part by demonstrating' the necessity and practibility of keep ing records in order to determine if the cow is a paying proposition. : The communities of Oregon Slope, Nyssa, Big Bend, Whits Settlement and Vale have stand; .rd clubs in this project. The clubs in the Wade and Jefferson communities fcsve not yet secured a leader, ai.d the Coun ty Club agent is meeting with them once a month. It will be interesting to watch the results obtained by these Junior dairymen. While a gr .t many in accuracies will probabl;-', occur dur ing the first two or- three, months due to the inexperience of the boys and girls, the results at the end of the project year will 1 fairly ac curate index not only to the cow's producing ability but also as to whether she is a money maker or a boarder, as determined "by the net income. CORDIT DEATH SELF-PLANNED New Plymouth Merchant Blown Off ins Own Head With Shotgun. New Plymouth The body of Ira Cordit was found Thursday noon with the head blown off in a vacant cellar on the Harvey V right place, two miles from French, a small community 15 miles from here. Ac cording to those intimately acquaint ed with him it is believed that Cor dit ended his' own life. He was the owner of the Cordit Mercantile store at French. Cordit disappeared f.om his home on Tuesday, hatless, and carried a shotgun. His family, believing he was going to visit neighbors, did not question him. Wf.;n he failed to put in an appearam on the fol lowing day it was sup.icr.ed he was visiting nearby. Wede;"day his rel atives becoming alarmed at his ab sence, a search party t ui organized, which found the bo!y after 24 hours' search. The body was taken to Payette late Thursday by the coroner, 11. F. Knight . Surviving Cordit are his widow, a son in California,' one in Nebraitka and sj'Vt-n other thildnn who live at home.- J. I). Falrman of bualnets visitor In this wssk, I'l'ptr was a Vuls one dsy M JON DAY iimi Train Hits Truck; Driver Injured Narrow Escape From Death Mcde ; , by W. S. Keeley Truck ' ! - Demolished. W. S. Keeley, an employe of the King Construction Company, nar rowly escaped death Saturday morn ing when the truck which he was driving was wrecked by an early morning train.! The driver ' was making his first ' trip that morning and the Diamond T was heavily loaded. The motor was not working in, good order, and the roads were frozen, causing the wheels of the truck to slip continually., Mr. Keeley's mind was on his truck alone, and so was unaware of the approaching train. , The truck was on the crossing near the Bulley Creek bridge when the train struck it, throwing it sev eral feet into the ditch nearby. The driver was thrown clear of the truck, and than fell in the midst of the wreckage. . He was not fatally injured, but the machine was dam aged beyond "repair. The injured man was carried to the camp only a ' short distance away but his condition was quite ser ious so he was brought to the Vale hospital Sunday. On the doctor's examination, it was learend that be sides being bruised badly,' one leg was broken. Mr. Keeley is improv ing as rapidly as can be expected. PARENT TEACHERS MEETING P. T. A, Will Present Play In Next . ' Six Weeks Committee Appointed The Parent Teachers meeting on Tuesday evening was well attended. The topic for the evening, "Atten dance of Vale Schools,1 was ably discussed and . very instructive to those who attended. One decision of importance was made by the members of the so ciety. They decided to present a play in the next six weeks, and a committee to select a desirable pro duction was appointed,' . FIVE TRUE BILLS FOUND GRAND JURY REPORTS AT END ( OF BUSY-WEEK'S .. .. . i . SESSION. :. -,, Five indictments were returned by the grand jury which, concluded its wofk and made its report last Fri day afternon. One recommendation was made by the grand ' jury that ; the county Court supply a fund of $1,000 for the use of District Attorney in spe cial investigation, and prosecution of violators of the prohibition laws. Vinicl Schroeder . was indicted for larceny of an animal. Robert H. LeRoy was indicted for assault with a dangerous weapon. He' shot a man in the foot at On tario several weeks ago when an at tempt was made to keep him from beating up his wife, Edward McEvoy was indicted for larceny of the Weaver automobile in Ontario several weeks ago. Manual Montaya, arrested for larceny in the Toggery Bill store in Ontario, was indicted. And ' Archie Nichols was indicted for murder in the first degree. OLD FRONTIERSMAN IS DEAD J. C. Johnston Was An Old Resi dent of Malheur County. . John C. Johnson,' who resided in Malheur county many years, passed quietly away at his home in Big Bend on January 7th. ' He was 76 years old and was bom in Tenn essee. He moved westward to Iowa, Kansas, Colorado, Texas, and then to Oregon, keeping abreast in the early settlement of the frontier, having made eight new homes out of he raw resources of the west. The last three years of. his life have been shadowed by illness but his closing hours were made peacefully happy by the ministrations of loving relatives and friends. He is survivied ' by his faithful wife and eleven children,' nine of whom were at his bedside during his last illness. To mourn his loss ere ' his wife, Mrs. Maude Johnton, eight daughters, Mrs. Gertie Rchulti and Mrs. Agnes Holly of Big' Bend, Mrs. Cecil Boswell and Mrs. Delia Bullock of Vale, Mrs. Bertha GibBon of; Weiser, Mrs. Villa Kellc-y of Ru pert, Mrs. Lulu Thomas of Rose. burg, and Mrs. Grace Unruh of Salem, and three 1 sons, Earl and Jesse Johnston of Big Bend and Gay Johnston of Ontario. The funeral was held at the home of the deceased, with Rev. ' Williams officiating, and the body was tenderly laid to rest In the Uoswell ceme tery. ( ... IMPROVING RAPIDLY.1 Word comes frum liuker that Au drey Dale Fellows is improving quit rapidly from ths effects of the seri ous operation performed a few days go, CRESTOfl III IS CRUSHED TO DEATH Frightened Team .Catches ' McDaniel Between Wagon and House and Crush ph Life Out Instantly : - ; ,.'!! t A tragic accident was revealed Wednesday morning when the body, of Dewey . McDaniels was : found, crushed and bruised beyond recogni tion almost, on the old place owned -bv C. A. Stout, near Creston. The young man , had started out from Mr. Stout's home the previous morning with hayrack and team ex- ' pecting to be away all that day. When he reached the -old place , he stopped for some-reason, and from, appearances it is supposed the horses became frightened and' ran " In thi" direction ' of the house. ! Mc- DAnfata ' frinA ttt afnn ftiom nnrl wad caught between the heavy hayrack 1 and the ' house. Death Was in stantaneous. ' v "'' "'" ' Mr. and Mrs. Stout and Mrs. Mo ' Denials became alarmed at the con- ' tinuod absence of the young man,' 1 and on Wednesday ' ' morning Mr.1 Stout started in search of him. When he reached the ' okl ' place he' ' found the team standing . near ' the house and the body wedged between it and the hayrack. The horses had apparently not moved since the ac cident occurred. ' ' ' Mr. and Mrs. McDanial'a home was in Boise, but since last fall . they have worked for C. A. Stout of , Creston. CLUB'S PART IS DONE i , DESTINY OF DAIRY CORPORA- TION NOW RESTS IN HANDS , OF DIRECTORS. , , . The ' Enterprise has been author- ' , ized bv President L. P. Lumnee ' of the) Vale Ad Club, to publish "a ' statement tnis weeK, setting rortn what the Ad club attempted to do ' in the formation of the dairy' cow corporation ' to Bhow that the j'club has done ' everything it set out. to'.' do land can do and that the destinies of the corporation now rests In the ' hands of the directors of the corpor ation, duly elected by ( the stock holders.' ', .- '(There seema to he an imnression on the oart of some DeoDle in Vale ' that the affairs of the corporation organized to assist the farmers of this .vicinity to obtain dairy cows. ' ' stifl rests in the hands of the Ad Club. This is ' incorrect, and I do-. sir - to right it' said President Lumpee. ''-'' "', ' ' "!ome weeks ago the Ad Club was '. requested Dy larmers arouna vale ti aa.lof tn 4Tha nrnnntiin t9 a 'tvm ' poretion to ' finance them 1 in ' secur- ' took the work and some of its mem-, bers nut in many hours of valuable time on it. In the course ' of time ' ' panltaf afrwlr fn iThA ' amnnnf " nl ' 1 $5700 was secured, the corporation' '.' was organized and at a meeting of ' the i stockholders held a few days ' Biro tha following 'men wern elected ' as directors of the corporation:,- M. G. Hope, C. C. Mueller, Alf Cheater, Harry Beelar and Leo Schmidt. These directors elected as, their of ficers, M. G. Hope as president and C. C. Mueller as secretary." , . r .", ."The Ad Club has done everything that it can and tha affairs are now . , by law in the hands of the ducOcrB ; . mentioned above. The Ad Ciu'i is, ... being criticized by some for an al- ,, legad slowneiw in pushing the. dairy ' cow purchase. I am not holding ,. any brief one way or' the other on -. this criticism other . than it is yl strongly directed at the Club. Any . suggestion that people have to make , should be made to the directors of the corporation and not to officers v of the club." ,7". . IDAHO CROPS WORTH $67,318,900 . Output For 1921 Shows Good Com-''" parlson With 1920. i t. The value of Idaho's 16 bnpor" tant farm crops, based on an inven- . tory of December 1, 1921, was $67,-, 818,900, acordlng to a report issued "' Thursday by Julius II. Jacobson, ag- ' ricultural statistician for the Idaho crop reporting service. This com-, pares with lMi,8l7,177 for 1920, and -$187,680,610 for 1919. Production, ,, wax, however, exceptionally , . good, ' previous records. These were wheat, V okbt. Dotatoes. . Iiv. alsike clover . sued and apples. -, , .. . 7 Mr, and Mrs. II. E. Young were guests pf Mr. and Mrs'. R. H.' Pe-' Armond Friday evening and eo joyed , pleasant social time, and music. , '' P. L. Fai'ber was egiiitered at tits' Arlington hotel Saturday fciul r turned to his boms U llsrpor Uie following dy,