Crook County journal. (Prineville, Or.) 189?-1921, July 06, 1911, Image 7

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    CALIFORNIA TOWNS
EXPERIENCE QUAKES
San Francisco People Rtih
Into Streets In Panic When
Shock is Felt.
Hun Krniii'lm-ii. Two cnrtlinutk
ih'icki the hriivlmt a!ni- the bin
liuko if I'JiMI, mid i'iHiiiii'il by only
it li'W ni'vimilii JiiiI-imI tlx ci'iilrnl
liorilun of Cttlllniiila and wttalarn
Nevada Halurdny.
Only 1 1' I v h 1 dniiinXH. has liccti r
imriiMl from liny itiln, but In Hun
Krum-lsto nnd iiIIkt c lira In tlia
ftitml nri' puiHe i)l.t'd upon crowila
In aturi-a null rmtauranta mid (Iikih
was a pi'llmel! iotu from Ilia litrita
bn IiIImk. Muiiy dliH-m run nut wilh
tint iiaylim for tholr iiivala. No chlin
tiiy -II mid no ilpc. wtTB burnt, but
with tin- memory or the b'g earth
innk in mind, thu pcoplo wure badly
siurnd.
tine pi-fuHnr fwituro of the earth
quux wna thnt It did Hot nppi-ur to
lollow the old "fault" In the eurth'
crul winch lull linen the playground
of ti'iublort In the (mat, but riii'udxd
fmm thu aai'onat runiwnri! to the
tflnrrae, Including hitherto exempt
mountain area. It waa felt V the
northward of Sacramento, In the Site
ramrnio Valley; aoutbward aa far aa
Fresno, and to the eaat at Carson and
Itrno. Nev., the latter plaie eipor
lenrlng the heaviest shook In Ha hla
tory. Blight damage waa done to
bulldlnga In Ban Kranclaco.
Stamen' Btrlka l( Called OX.
Liverpool. The great leumini'i and
dockers' alrlke, which lma caused
great loaa and Inconvenience to ahlp
per and delay to the traveling pub
lic, waa ended when the t'unard, tho
White Hiur and the other lluea In the
hipping combine agreed to recognlte
the dockera' union.
NEWS PARAGRAPHS FROM
OT1IEK CITIES IN OKEOON
W. M, Button, mayor of Hprlngfleld,
Kaa announced hi resignation, to Uke
effect on Auguat IT.
Hirawberry Day and the hnrae show
at WeatoQ were very successful. The
affair wa atlended by 3000 people.
Hl depoalntra opened account on
the flrat day that the postal laving
bank wa opened by 'otmater Cur
tla at Marahlliild.
Charle Smith, a well known young
man of Oregon City, baa been myater
loualy mlaalng alnce the night of June
24, and It la feared be ha committed
(ulcldo.
The flrat week of dimmer achool at
the t'nlverally of Oregon mark a uc
cosfii.l beginning of the ii-aaion. With
146 attidenta In attendance all clusaea
are well under way.
Following the realgnallnn of Hoy
Hlilelda, aecund assistant attorney-
general, James W. Crawford, on of
Attorneyienernl Crawford, wa ap
pointed lo the poaltlon.
With more than 10UO alrnattirei af
fixed to the petition asking for the
recall of Judge John Coke, of Marsh
field, liferent In the preliminary cam-
pulgn la Increasing dully.
A the reault of a meellng held In
Albany an exhibit will bu ent to rep
resent the Willamette Valley at the
various big land alio to be held In
the Middle Weat till foil.
With the beginning of another fl
ral year, acte operation on the un
completed gnp of the Natron Klamath
cutoff on the Southern Pacific Kail
way likely will be alarted.
The Astoria branch postal eavlngi
bank completed It flrat two month
of exlatene with depoalt amounting
to IH.I&3. which I believed to be
the record for a city of th! lxe.
K. S. Krauae, of the O. A. C. horti
culture department, ha returned from
an extended tour through enatern ex
perlment elation, Including the go
ernment plant at Washington, D. C
Holomon Miller, Booth Portland
dniKulat. charged with elllng co-
mine to boys, wa found guilty by
GERMANY IRRITATES FRANCE
Relations 8trlnd Over Dispatch of
Gunboat to Morocco.
Pari Not luee the stormy day
Immediately preceding the Algerian
conference have the relation between
Prance and Germany been o near the
breaking point. All Franco I thrilled
with Indignation over the report that
Germany haa ordered a gunboat to
Moroccan water. The excuae that
(iermun subjects demand protection
la ridiculed and official circle assert
that unleni Uermnny I blocked
eixure of territory la certain.
May Bar Bank' Skeleton.
Portland, Ore. Indictment of Lou I
J. Wilde and W. Cooper Morrla for
the alleged embczxlcmcnt of $90,000
of the fund of tho Oregon Trust &
Bavlnga Hunk five year ago promise
to reault In aenaatlonal development
Prosecution of the charge aga'.nat
Wilde and Morrla may bring out In
Ida Information aa to how the affair
of the defunct booking Inatltutlon
were misdirected.
RECIPROCITY VOTE
BY ENDJF JULY
La Follette Will Make Longest
Speech In Presenting His
Tariff Amendment.
HEAT KILLS IN CHICAGO
Mercury From 103 to 110, and Many
Prostrated.
Chicago. With atreet therinomo
ten registering from 103 to 110 de
grees, Chicago panted and sniggered
lta way through deadly heat. It Is
believed that total mortality growing
out of tho excessive temperature la
at least 20. Prostration wore num
bered by hundreds. Men and women
dropped In dead faints In the at recta,
In car, In the park, and even on
the lake front where a breeze afford
ed the one bit of relief.
TAFT'S VISIT IS FEATURE
President to Address Endeavorera
Twlc on "Training Cltliena." '
Atlantic City, N. J. President Tafl,
Speaker Clark, ex-Vlce-Presldent Fair
bank and many men, lendur In re
ligious work, are expected to mid reus
the thousands of delegate ut the 2." Hi
International Chrlatliin Kndeavor con
vention here. The convention will
hold dully sesalona for a week, mid
the theme will be "Training for Ser
vice." The feature will be the visit of
President Taft, who Is expected to
peak twice on Friday night, when ad
dresses will be made on "Training
Cltlxcns."
11 1 11
2 3 11' 5 6 U
16 17 18 1920 "21 iSS
Jury In municipal court. The penalty
I $200 lino and 90 day' Imprison
nifiit. postal ravings bnnk In Oregon
have taken In deposit amounting to
t'.'M this year, according to a aum
niary of the report of the condition
of bunka mndo out by Will Wrlgttl.
auperlntendent of banks.
Dlreclor of the Grande Hondo
Chuutauiiua have announced the pro
gram for the aecond annual scss'oti
of thnt association at Riverside Park,
a splendid natural wood just outside
of the city limit of la Grande.
' County ichool luperlntendent, with
Governor Weat, vlalted all of the
state Instltutlona last week and were
given a practical demonstration of
the workings of the new prison syi
tern which ha been adopted by the
governor.
Judge Hamilton and Frederick V.
Holman, representing regent of the
University of Oregon, are In Bulem
studying the referendum petition
with Judge Slater. Judge Slator lays
evidence I being accumulated but
will be kept secret until charge are
filed.
While no definite action has been
reached by State Printer Punnlway a
to whether he will abide by the order
of Secretary Olcott and remove the
state printing plant from, the state
c apltol, Superintendent Plimpton, It
la understood, la considering ways and
mean whereby auch a move might
be made poselble.
After Investigating charge pre
ferred against the Sumpter Valley
Riillroad Company by the patrons of
the line of Inadequate service, the
railroad commission Issued an order
In which the transportation company
Is required to make extensive Im
provement to It railroad property
within the next 60 dnj-B.
The request published by Walter
Pierce nnd other boosters of Hot
Lake, Union county, for suggest Ive
plans for the construction of a model
public school building, regardless of
the cost, has aroused general Interest
throughout the state and a large
number of plans has been sent In to
State Superintendent Alderman.
Governor West named the following
delegates to the annual convention
of American Prison Association at
Omaha, October 1415: Rev. W. P.
White, Albany; W. F. Woodward,
Judge George Tazwell, Rev. W. G.
MacLaren, Senator Ben Selling, Fa
ther E. V. O'Hara, Judge John Van
Znnte, Judge W. N. Gatens and Mrs,
Lola G. Baldwin, Portland, and Fa
ther A. Moore, Rov. P. E. Bauer and
torn R. Wilson, Salem.
All prlvnte work by tho employes
In the office of the secretary of state
must be discontinued, according to a
statement made by Secretary Olcott.
He states that all of the employes
are receiving good salaries from the
state and will be compelled to devote
themselves to tlws business of the
state. While all of the books and
Tocords in the secretary's oillco are
public records, lie says that anyone
desiring to secure Information from
these records must do so from some
one elso tliun tho employed.
Washington. The Canadian reci
procity situation has cleared to a
marked degree and canvaas of the
Senate was In every way assuring to
friend of the measure. With not
more than a doxen set speeches In
prospect and with eight-hour sessions
on the program many of the enators
count on a vote before the end of
July.
The moat form'dable speech still to
be made Is that of Sennlor La Fol
lette. He will preaent hla long-promised
tariff amendment to the recipro
city bill and will talk for three or
four day, dlcuslng the tariff even
more than reciprocity. These amend
ments will be In the nature of a sub- j
tltute for all other tariff auggeton. i
With reciprocity disposed of. It I
believed that the seealon will not be
greatly prolonged. The "standpat"
Republican are d!pod to concede
a vote on the wool and free list bill.
The Hemocratlc entor have said
from the beginning they would be at-li-fted
with a rollrall on the two tariff
bill and there are Indication that
the "atandpttt Republican will let
these go lo vote without much debate
In view of the threatened presiden
tial veto of both bill.
Puzxl Find the Insurgent.
In the House It ha not been diffi
cult to place the Insurgenta, but lnce
Canadian reciprocity became a !lve
subject In the Senate It 1 difficult to
find the Insurgents. Now , no one
would Inllmote that either Galllnger
or lleyburn Is an Insurgent, but the
way New Hampshire and Idaho Jump
on this administration bill you cannot
tell.
Penrose of Pennsylvania seems to
be the only slmon pure regular, al
though we must not forget the vener
able Cullom of Illinois, who never
devhtea from the strn'ght path or
regularity.- Hut there seems to be a
new crop of insurgents, and it Is diffi
cult to make distinctions theae days.
Will Probe Express Companies,
A sweeping invest'gatlou of all ex
press compun e in the United State
Bffecied by the Interstate commerce
laws has heen ordered by the Inter
state Commerce Commission. Practi
cally all of the express companies,
with the exception of the Long Inland,
filed new tariffs, wh'ch are believed
to be material reductions In rates. H
wa snld that It would requ're several
months to compare these rates with
those now in existence.
Merger In Steel Cuts Competition.
Restriction of competition Is de
clored to hove been the prime object
of the orgnnlxera of the United States
Steel Corporation, which, capitalized
nt $1,4KS!,000,000, had tangible prop
erty worth only $682,000,000. The
cornorntlon. having concentrated Its
efforts to secure ore properties, now
owns "5 per cent of the lake ores
upon which the present steel Industry
Is Imced. These are some of the con
elusions reached In the long-expected
report of Commiss'oner of Corpora
tions Herbert Knox Smith on the steel
Industry, pnrt of which was submitted
to the president.
. Government Has Surplus.
When the government's fiscal year
ended June 30, the federal treasury
held a cash surplus of at least
$13,000,000, and showed an excess of
receipts over disbursements for the
flrat time since 1907.
From estimates which treasury ofll
clnls consider reliable, it is apparent
the government In past 12 months re
ceived from all sources not less than
$GS9,000.000, about $10,000,000 more
thnri expected, nnd spent $ti.'i6,000,000
about $0,000,000 less than planned.
In round figures It cost the govern
ment last year 1175.000,000 for the
civil service, $181,000,000 for the army,
$120,000,000 for the navy, $21,000,000
for the Indians, $158,000,000 for pen
sions nnd $21,000,000 for interest on
the public debt. Expenses for In
dians, pensions and civil service all
have exceeded the first estimates.
More than $37,000,000 waa spent upon
the Panama canal.
Army Reorganization Cuts Red Tape.
General Leonard Wood's plans for
reorganizing the army on a practical
military basis, disregarding congres
sional and local influence, has stirred
IP a ibis commotion In Washington,
iut the reforms which General Wood
has In mind are such that he can put
them through without congressional
authority.
In doing away with staff offices nt
the various department headquarters
General Wood has greatly- lessened
the expense oi running the army, for
he tins paved the way for dismissing
l lnrga corps or unnecessary clerKs,
has 'cut out the duplication of 'work,
and simplified the administrative
work of the service. Department
quartermasters, commissaries and the
Uke have been dispensed with,
PIONEER SADDLER
Manufacturer of and dealer In
Harries, Saddles, Chap, Bridle, Silver-Mounted Bits
and Spurs. Reatas, Quirts, Ladies' Stride Saddles.
E. H. Smith, Prop. Prineville, Or.
Crook County
Jewelry &
Sporting Goods
Store
DR. K. D. KLTCIIini
Drugless Healer
Spinal Adjustment and Dietetics 4
Specialty
CONSULTATION FREE
Hours 70 to 13 . ra- 1 to I p. m.
('all answered promptly.
Rooms 16-17 Adamson B'dg.
DON'T NEGLECT
YOUR WATCH
A WATCH is a delicate piece
of machinery. It calls for
less attention than most
machinery, but must be cleaned
and oiled occasionally to keep
perfect time.
With proper care a Waltham
Watch will keep perfect time ,
ior a lifetime. It will pay you
well to let us clean your watch
every 12 or 18 month. .
L. KAMSTRA, Proprietor.
D. H. PEOPLES
Gvil and Irrigation Engineer.
Irrigation, Subdivision, Land
Surveying, Mapping,
Estimating.
Office next door to Lyric Therter
O. H. Brewster. C. E.
B. L. Brewster
City Knifineer
Pnneviile, Or,
Brewster Engineering Co.,
Prinevill., Oregon.
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Sonera filacksmithing
Horseshoeing, Wood Work, etc.,
Neatly and Promptly Donb
Whes it is Donb By : : :
Robert TIfoore
Satisfaction Will Be Guaranteed
Prineville,
Oregon.
Surveying, Maping, Estimates,
Phone, Pioneer 234.
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HARNESS and
SADDLERY
SHOP
1 H.D. STILL
S Prineville, Oregon
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Big Horse Sale
The Central Oregon Live Stock
Sales Ass'n of Redmond, Oregon,
announces their first monthly sale on
July 17th, 1911.
C.R. Henry
Resident Locator of
HOMESTEADS
In Southern Crook Co.
Address : : Paulina, Oregon
I
Sale will run until all horses that are
listed are sold. We guarantee to
have the buyers here.
If you have any horses to
them with our secretary,
selling is nominal.
sell, list
Fee for
Contest Notice. ,
Department of the Interior,
United States Land Office, Tne Dalles Ora.
June (t, 191 1.
To William H, Bryan of Prineville, Oregon
Con tea tee:
Yon are hereby notified that Frank S.
Hoffman, who Hives I"rineville, Orecon. as
his poetoffloe address, did on April 34, 1911,
file in this office hiH duly corroborated ap
plication to contest and secure the cancella
tion of your bometead,8ertHl No. OrW made
April 7. "U. tor '3 rv4. o'JB" fiuu io
Township 16 S., Rantfe 1 E., Willamette
Meridian, and as grounds for hiscontest he al
lettea that said William H. Bryan haa wholly
abandoned said traci for over six months
last past; that he has wholly failed to reside
upon, improve and cultivate said tract of land
as required by law, i r at all; that his absence
therefrom was not due to his employment in
the army, navy or marine corps oi the United
States in time of war.
You are, therefore, further notified that the
said allegations will be taken by this office aa
having been confessed by you, and your said
entry will be canceled thereunder without
your lunner Tllflll H OW ucnru lurreiu, cuuw
before this office or on appeal, if you fail to die
in this office within twenty days after the
FOU RTH publication of this notice, as shown
below, your answer, under oath, specifically
intetiiuT and resitondint: to these allegations of
contest, or if you fail within that time to tile
in this office due proot cuai you nave served a
copy of your answer en the said contestant
either iu person or by registered mail. If this
service is made by the delivery of a copy of
your answer to the contestant in person, proof
of such service must be either the said con
testant's written acknowledgment of his re
ceipt of the copv, showing the date of its re
ceipt, or the affidavit of the person by whom
the delivery was made stating when and
where the copy was delivered; if msde by regis
tered mail, proof of such service must consist of
the affidavit oi the person by w horn the copy waa
mailed statiug when and the postottlee to
which it was mailed, and this affidavit must
be accompanied by the postmaster's receipt
for the letter.
You should state in vour answer the nameof
the postofflce to which you desire future
notices to be seut to you.
A.2tp - o. W. MOORE, Register,
Date of first publication June 29. lftll.
Date of second publication July ft, 1911.
Date of third publication July IS, 1H.
Date of fourth publication July WU.
For further information apply to
Wm. Phoenix
Secretary, Redmond, Oregon.
Notice for Publication.
Department of the Interior, 1'. 9. Lsnil Odica
t The Dalles, Oregon, May J3rd Mil.
Koliue is hereby Riven that
Jamks R. Hakvky,
of Hoberts, Orenun, who. on Noveraberflth, 1906,
made Homestead, No. Vm serial, No. tMiVB, tor
lots 6 and 7, See. 6 and lot 1, s N'W'j, section
7, township IS south, range 17 east, Willamette
Meridian, has tiled notiieoi intention to make
ttnal live-Year proof, to establish elaim to the
land above described, before Warren Hrown,
countv clerk (it his office, at Prineville, Ore
gon, on the 5th day of July. 1911.
claimant names as witnesses: James A.
Mom tt. of Prineville, Oregon. lUaud ('. Dun.
ham, .1. K Roberts, Arthur ll. Moss, of Rubens,
Oregon. C. W. MOOKlC, Register. 6-ll
Furnished Rooms for Rent.
Funnelled, eintjlo or ilouble. Also
beds for tlie Fourth. Imjuireat Stiipp
house, Mrs. Ida Proso, nropr. 6-15