OREGON NEWS NOTES GF 6ENERALJNTEREST Events Occurring Throughout the State During the Past Week. LOGGING CAMPS ARE OPEN Warm Weather Encourages Logger, Market la Steadier.. Portland. With the disappearance of the snow la the timber, logging camp in the Columbia river district are gradually resuming operations af ter a shut down of more than a month. This will be welcome new to some millmen who in the past month have run short on logs a a result of the good demand for the sawed product. Some mills, it is stated, will have to close down for several weeks, unless the logging camps come to their res cue shortly. The situation looks good to the log gers for the market Is steadier than at any time during the past two years and prices are better, too. For the present the ruling basis of quotation is $7. $10 and 113, but it Is considered possible that $1 will be added to this price on February 15, when the dollar advance per thousand goes into effect on Puget sound. However, opinions differ somewhat on this point among the loggers here. Water for Irrigation I Assured. Baker. There is more snow In the mountains of eastern Oregon at the present time than for several years past, and indications are that the coming spring and summer will see more water available for irrigation and placer mining than there has been for several years. The deepest snow on the level reported from any of the nearby territory is twelve feet at Ca ble Sove In the Sumpter district, about 7000 feet above sea leveL At Sump ter there is five feet on the level, at Greenhorn and Bourne nine feet, and about the same depth at Cornucopia, in the northeast end of the county. Farmers Resent Monopoly. Pendleton. Warmly resenting the' apparent operations of a grain bag monopoly, which seems to be plan ning a double priced holdup of the grain growers of the northwest for the coming summer, local fanners through the county union of the Farm ers' Co-operative and Educational Un ion are planning to ask aid from the legislature and from the national con gress if necessary. At this time the grain bag brokers are asking 11 cents for bags for the coming harvest. This price is regard ed as outrageous by the farmers since the Indian jute crop this year is re ported as remarkably heavy. It Is pointed out that the 11 cents per bag quotation now given is prima facie evidence that the supply of bags Is monopolized. At this time last year grain bags were quoted at 6 cents. Large Apple Crop Assured. Hood River. That Hood River val ley will have a very large crop of ap ples next year seems evident from the results secured in the blooming of the standard varieties. The Davidson Fruit company has for many years followed the plan of forced blooming of the several varieties, which has given it a concrete basis upon which to base estimates of the annual yield of apples in the valley. The indoor orchard composed of a large number of limbs taken from fruit trees and bloomed by steam in cubation, is now prophetic of what the orchards will be later. The old Spit zenberg trees show an extraordinarily heavy crop. Jonathans are also very heavy with bloom. Newtowns, Winter Banana, Oregon Red, Black Twig, Red Cheeks and Ortleys are also showing a full crop for next season. The estimate for next season's crop is about 1,250,000 boxes. Relief Boat Goes to Nehalem. Portland. As a sort of relief boat the gasoline schooner Mlrene, Captain , Mays, left on a special trip to Nehal em loaded to the guardB with provis ions. For the last two or three weeks Nehalem practically has been shut off from the outside world so far as tran sportation facilities are concerned. The washouts and landslides put the railroad out of commission temporari ly. On the completion of the railway the steamer service from Portland to Nehalem was discontinued. Conse quently the residents have been un able to get in any supplies recently. It is said the stores there have about been depleted of various kinds of ne cessities. Camps to be Electrified. Marshfleld. Electrically operated logging camps Is the plan of the Smith Lumber company here. The company is planing to electrify all Its plants Id this county. In' addition to the work that Is now being performed by don key engines, each camp will be sup plied with a new electrically operated aawJor cutting trees. FRANK CHANCE J! Frank L. Chance, new manager of the New York Yankee, who will get $5,000 yearly salary. Erief News of the week The second trial of the criminal anti-trust suit against the "bath tub trust" began in the I'nlted State dis trict court at Detroit Monday. From financial circles in New York comes a story of an alliance between Hill and Gould interests that Indi cates early entry of the Hill railroad into California. The New York Stock Exchange put Itself on record as opposed to incor poration, and ns against the enact ment Of a maximum rate of interest on call loans. I'nder the plan for dissolving the merger of the I'nion and Southern Pa cific roads, the main line of the Cen tral Pacific Is sold to the I'nion Pa cific for SlGl'.uOu.OOO. Murrled aliens whose families are In their native land must bring them to the United States before they them selves can become citizens, according to a mllr.3 cf Federal Judce Anderson of Indianapolis. Prominent Masons In New York, represented by Raymond K. Kl'ne, of Brooklyn, paid S1500 for the gold Knights Templars invitation to Presi dent McKinley which was found re cently In possession of a pawnbroker. With but three opposing votes, an amendment to the constitution grant ing women t!:e right to the ballot parsed in the Nevada state senate. The amendment has already passed the house, and will now go to the peo ple for ratification. Precipitating a struggle that may .in volve the entire trade relations of Washington and Oregon with Califor nia, the West Coast Lumber Manufac turers' association, at its annual met t lr.5 in Tacoma, adopted a resolut'on putting the question of the San Fran cicco boycott on finished fir lumber in the hands of a committee of seven and appropriating SICfcO from the gen era! fund -o carry on the preliminary wcrk- PcOpIe in the News President-elect Wilson h;is advised some cf his clorcst fricr.ds that, to personally investigate conditions in the Philippines and Alaska, he will visit those countries at the end or the extra session of congress.' Sir Edv.ard Grey, In the house of commons, announced that the British government tis yet had reached no decision on the question of resuming negotiations fo the ratification of the Anglo-American arbitrat'on treaty. Professor McMurray of Columbia college urged the adoption of corporal punishment, which is forbidden now in New York schools, In his. report to the committee which has been making a searching Investigation of the school system. Twenty years In San Quentin prison was the sintence pronounced upon Carl Riedelhach, who appeared In Los Angeles November 19 last, grotesque ly masked, and terrified 200 police officers with an infernal machine. Governor Sulzer of New York sign ed a bill incorporating the Harriman research laboratory, founded by the widow of Edward H. Harriman. The laboratory will devote Its time and money to the discovery of cures for cancer and consumption. President Taft, in his farewell speech to the Ohio Society of Wash ington vigorously attacked the bill now pending in congress proposing autonomy and Independence In el?ht years for the Philippines. The squabble over the so-called lieu lands, consisting of valuable timber holdings in northern California, which resulted In the resignation of L. R. Glavis, secretary of the state conser vation commission, took a new turn when it became known that F. C. Dezendorf, special agent of the de partment of the Interior, Is conducting a quiet Investigation Into the whole affair. BRIEF NEWS OF OREGON The Hotel Lcrnna Ht Independent- was sold to W. K. Stein, a Portland nan. The consideration I said to be j:;o,oo). A prersure g.isolln tank used In connection with the Hunting plant of n North Plains hotel exploded, doing considerable ihtui.tito. Fifteen ton of delayed mall, which accumulated at Portland during the tirup of the Pacific Railway Navi gation Una, have arrived at Tillamook. In a party !0 strong, member of the legislature and tat official vis ited Pendleton for the purpose of In specting the Eastern Oregon state hospital for the Insane. j To determine whether or not mi nion which have spawned will return to the sea and live. I the subject of a series of test bring mad by the Coos Bay hatchery at Marshfleld. i Grant Pas ha been bonded for a I road to the coast and If this I built I Medford, Instead of projecting Una ' to Crescent City, can connect with the j Grants Pass road about 30 mile from ! there. . ' Equipped with part of the machin ery of a hydroaeroplane, Coral & King, of Murshrteld, are making ex periments with an automobile, which Is expected to aid motor vehicle on muddy roads. Lumbermen of Bend have received announcement from the railroad com panies of the lowering of rate on mill products to the eiist. The town Is given a rate which 1 only one cent above what Spokane ha. Petitions to the Ashland city coun cil asking that a date be set for a special election In connection with the Interurban and street railway project, have been perfected, and were pre sented to the couucll Tuesday. The month of January wa excep tionally wet In Astoria. Acordlng to records In Weather Observer Gil- more s omce mo precipitation nunng my ,,., I,ttert .top. alter thi. the month was 15.16 Inches, or S.03jdt. Inches In exces of the January aver j ltl thi. 8th ily of Jnnary, 1U13. ae ! It. 1.. JuHUaa, I ! County treasurer. I Breaking out of Jail In Coaullle. i 1 where he had been placed for drunk- I - . enncss, going to town and getting afinnQS lOrSillG bottle of wnisky and men returning to jail and demolishing another cell, was the way a logger there acted wica crrcstcd. "Model city" is the title which North Dcrd Is seeking, and to that end it Lr.3 engaged a firm of engineers to streishten out the engineering prob- !ems Involved in making a "city beuu- i liful" and to lay It out along metro politan I'.acs. A petition containing the nam of 230 residents of the Sluslaw forest reserve and vicinity, asklug senators and members of congress from Oregon to take steps to have the Sluslaw re serve returned to settlement and make It subject to homestead entry, was for warded from Eugene. The new city park site recently pur chased by Klamath Falls Is to be laid out and arranged by a professional landscape artist, acordlng to plan of the Park Commission and the Wo nvn's Civic League, which Is co-operating with the hoard In the develop ment of the city's park system. Automobile owners of MoMinnvllle J held a meeting for the purpose of dls- 1 cursing a bill now pending In the state legislature pertaining to taxes on uil j tcKtobiles. They were unanimously I opposed to the Intended tax rate of 30 cents per horsepower,' as long as automobiles were also taxed as per sonal property. Baker has followed La Grande In purchasing an automobile fire truck. A movement has been started to establish a cement, plant In Medford, there being large deposits available for cement manufacture there and ne gotiations h;ive been started to pur chase the plant at Gold Hill and movo it to that city. Experiments are being made at West Staytun by J. Costakls and K. Papadlyoanls with the culture of to bacco. They assert that conditions In Marion county are favorable for the successful raising of Turkish to bacco. Reing natives of Greece, they are familiar with tobacco culture and are setting part of their irrigated land to this crop. The taxpayers of Haker on Febru ary 21 will vole on the separata ques tions of issuing city bonds In the sum of $94,703 to repair the present city water works system by constructing a new Una from the settling tank to the distributing reservoirs, and the issuance of bonds In the sum of $165, 000 to complete the work noted above and extend the line to Impound tha waters of several other streams to which the city has title. With the transfer of the property of the North Bend Lumber company to the Swayne & Hoyt Lumber com pany, of Sun Francisco, there enter Into the lumber industry of Coo coun ty one of the largest firm on tha Pacific coast. Arrangement ar un der way to equip th mill with, new machinery so that Its capacity will b brought up to 80,000 feet a day, and the plans of the new owners are laid to contemplate doubling the capacity of the mill later. White Orpingtons for Salo. A few pure-bred While OrpliiiMun Cockerel; Kaatein ! k; kellerattaaa strain. Price euh ;1, Write or fall on Mr. John B. Urn n, Culver, Ore., It V O N. 1. I lit to 3 I let the price of enamel kilclienwure at Kamatra S Racket More. 2.11 Wood for Sale. Wood fur ta'e at It "5 and 5 cord at the vard; Rue extra per cord de livered. P. L. A W. Co. 1 111 Ready to Saw Wood. I havejn.t bought a woodaaw anil am prepared to do your work. I .cave or der at L. kanutra'. Jewelry Stole. MS MHTis'KaaTA. Horse for Sale) Address K. V. Constable, Prinevllle, Oregon. 111 Maurine Face Preparation Sold and guaranteed by Olda, Wort man A King. Portland, Oregon. Call for a Free Kaelal Treatment at the home al Mr. O. Cl'lsyptail. Ita-al irnt. 'Phone order promptly delivered. 12-12 Call for County Warrant. Notice Is heriby liven that Ceiieral Fund Warrant up to and including No, 14 will b paid upon preaentatlou. In terest slo alter I lot date. lated (hi loth day el January. 1U18. IS. I.. JORDAN, County Treamrer, Crook Co., Ore. For Sale White Wvandotl Cockerel by 1. (' ! Adamson, Prinevllle, Ore. -2ll Bid for Wood. Notice i herehv given that hid are i called lor to lurnlr.li 100 corda of ohl I a.ftMlI IlitlM IflttlwiUtat fitr lllM ISlllrl hilltriM anil MO coni ol aid id l imit eordaood (iutiioer preferred I lor the Crook Conn. ty llitfh School, Hid to be oHnrU th tlrat Monday in March, 1D1.1 Th county reserve Ilia right lo reject any or all bid. IW order ol the county court. W Rt:x llsuwx, Clerk. Call for Warrant Notice i hereby given that all Scalp Bounty Warrant up to and Including No "1 bin Vi naid AM nroat.litmttiin al Two Second-Hand Piano at a Great Saving. Write or tee Chas. F. Condart . V. J. T day tiiuht. Strangers welcome. lisu. Num.. N. (!.; Hcht Hn, V. It. ; T. I Coon, Sec.; C. 11. Ihxwiu-j die, Trreaa i Notice for Puhliciitiiiii. Department of the Interior, ! S. Land Ollice it l-akeview, Ore, Jauua-y lltli, lull Not coal lands Notice i. Iiereb given that , Cora K. lavi ! of Fife, Ori'iron, who on August 12th,' lull, made liouiemeatl entry No. Ul'vlil i lor the ej '.,, nl cj, nej J tectum j Tt. township 21 louth, range r2 eatt, Willamette Meridian, ha liled notice of Mntention to make final commutation I proof to establish c'aun to the lain) aliove ileH.-riliod before Chaa. A. Slier i man, I'nited States Coiiirni-aioiier. at ' Kile, Oregon, on the 2.'lh day of Feb ruary, l!U:i. Claimant name, a witnenHea: O. II. i Hall, U. A. 1'Bvit, Manley J. Lemons, I Charley Fry, all ol Kile, oregon. I l-U.'J A. W OllToN, Register. ! Notice to Creditors. I .Mince is nereii.v Kiven ny tneiin-i j ilerHlittied, the nilinliilHt rntor ol the eatiitiMif I.iirkln Weaver, ileci'iiHcil. to the creilltnrx of khM rstiite niidipj rill ii'-iniiim in,, inn cuimin HK'llllHl tile aiiine tu preHeiit micli c I it I in h to the iitulerxlirned it the nlllee ol M. I Kill. tt ill Prinevllle, Oreumi, within hIx motitliM from the lli'xt piihllcn tli m (if tlila nn i Ire. Dated this 2:inl day of Jan.. 1913. David Wkavkk. Administrator o( the estate of I.iirkln WenveT, (IocciihimI. Notico for Puhliciitmn. D.'jmrtmi'itt of the tnli-rlor, V. 8. I.aiiIOIIi.:e ul Tim Imllea. Ori'ii.in, .litnimry Isth, l'Jl:i. fiolfce U herfl.y alveii ilmi Otmrli-i ljnii.i.rt nl BarilPt, Ori'K'in, alio, on Decern her lif.lb lyi.r. anil a.Mltliinal, Mpplfniln'r I7lh, I'hiu made lii.rrifBti-Hil No. HHtm HiTtnl No. lcjl'7 ami leTlal No. mViSil. lor in-'i amotion ;i:i and n;ii tcciliii) ;w ami W4 nw'-.. na1 Ha1-, Hcctiun :m. Ti W wiiitli, K I'HHl. lllaini'lle Meridian hat tiled niitlceur lntelill()n to make tllml U-yimr iriK)f, to entalillith elalin u the land abuvu em crllaid. belnra rliai. A. HliiTinan. It. H, ( Nim in la tloner, al liliofllce at Ftlo, Ori'Kon, ou the sih day of March, HI;i, rlalmaiit liaiiu. aH wltnemleii: ,oiph Ktrpet. Molt Leinoni, Wutltiy Struct, Henry Hlreut, all ol Fife, orugon. i.;n C. W. MtMlHK, Heglnter. Citation. In the county court of the State of Or egon, for the count" of Crook. In the matter of the estate of Mary Wilkin, deceased Citation. To the heirs unknown of Mary Wil kin, deceased, greeting: in the name ol the state of Oregon, you are hereby cited anil required to appear in the county court of the state 01 Oregon, for the county of Crook at the court room thereof, at Prinevllle, in the county of Crook, on Monday, the 7th day of April, 11)1:1, at 10 o'clock In the forenoon of that day, then and theie iu aliow csuse, if any there be, why an order should not be made by this court authorizing the administra tor of said estate to sell all the real property of said deceased at private ale as in the petition prayed for. Witness, the lion. (i. Springer, judge of the county court ol the state of Or egon for the county of Crook, with the Htal of said court sillied thi 6th day February, : D., 11)13. 2 6 Attest: Wakhkn Bhown, Clerk. JF SVv'V'a'v.'.'' -V ,. fi k4 ,V,V V SjiltlmaSmt i 31 v 'isfi' "WOOD LARK rteatmya tlophar. Hat Ttnta, ftqulrrela and FrnlrUt TV, Ttenulrea no prep aration. Alwaya ready for uae, Alwuya Hatlahla. Whn you buy ilritmnd Hi beat aet III "Woodliirk" Hrnnd. Huiilrrela Ilka It and a amnio kernel kill. Moat economical polaoii made. Hundred hav ttHii killed with tha run Iritis of a alnale ran, Io not wait uiilll ton lnt lo kill III Praia. I'm KAItl.Y when natural food la aenna and before the young era born for beat rull. Money buck If you'r not nut tuned. A I your lK-nlrr clankc. wooouAfto onua co., pomtiano. oaf. A Royal Roast p or lur your Sunday or weekday dinner i the on we ran aerva you wllh al any time. We keep the beat ol mean, aiu-li a are eaten hy ilm nioal ex. Bi-tlug diner with ureal aalinlactlon and keen reliali. Our I hi' I, pork, inutlim, veal, poultry ami ham are particularly line anil tender. City Meat Market I Pioneer None Money Back if You Are Not Satisfied. Made at Home. Pioneer Creani Agents DeLaval Separator. LUMBER 13 I 1 Tl D. P. Adamson & Co., Druggists For Drugs, Patent Medicine, Chemical Lowney's Candies, Ice Cream Soda, Sta tionery and Pretcription lee D. P. Adamson & Co. When rough, high-proof, strong whiskey begins to tell on you when your nerves and stomach commence "calling for help" try a little Cyrus Noble. It is mild in character aged in wood in charred barrels blended .and re-aged in steam-heated warehouses. This gives it that palatable, enjoyable flavor peculiar to it its mellowness its richness. ' 1 Sold by firit-cln dealer all oyer th world. W. J. Van Schuyver & Company, Agents,Portland . 0 w - : - Butter Better Go. Shingle, Moulding, Windows, Dooro, GlasseH, Etc. Ktc, Ktc, SHIPP& PERRY PKINKVILLE, OREGON I wwiy-;ffl.f.!V