1IAVF. YOU OREGON NEWS NOTES OF GENERAL INTEREST Events Occurring Throughou the State During the Past Week. URen Hat New Ta Idea. Salem. W. S. U'Ren. of Oreso City, evidently intends to have sub mitted to the peor'e at the next gen tral election an amendment to th constitution providing for the exemr, tion of personal property to the valu of 15i'0 from taxation. Mr. V'Ret called Secretary of Slate Olcott ove the telephone and asked him to ap Trove a form of petition hich will b circulated for the initiation of the law It is planned to make it mandator, upon the secretary of state to resub mit the measure to the people fo repeal at the 191 and 131S elections While the object of this plan has no been reTealed, it is believed that It It intended to win votes for the amend mer.t JOHN L McNAB I is t REVISE SCHOOL COURSE County Superintendents Approve am Urge Stats Board to Adopt It. Salem. Freedom ia exercising th election of studies constitutes th chief feature of the revised hiph schoo course of study just completed by I committee appointed by State Super intendent of Public Instruction Chur chill, and which, together with th recommendation of the committee will be submitted to the state boart of education at its next meeting fo. adoption. Both the course of stud and recommendations were submitte to the country school superintendent! ia session here, and both receiver their approval and indorsement. Additional features are that a t"Pl may graduate from the high schoo without mathematics, the placing o American history in the third insteai of the fourth year, and half a year'i course in civil government The con sent of the principal, however, is nec essary for the student to do so. Amer ican history is made a study of th third instead of the fourth year. Th revised course of study provides fot five courses and it is intended that all of them shall be taught only in lh larger high schools. Probably not mo than one of them will be taught It the smaller high schools. John L. McNab, federal district at torney at San Francisco, who attacked Attorney-General McReynolds in a white slave case and resigned. FRAUD IN REFERENDUM? Will Investigate Petition to Refer Oregon Compensation Law. Salem, Or. In the belief that they have evidence that discredits many of the signatures to the petitions to refer the workmen's compensation act, Har vey Beckwith and C. P. Babcock. pros pective members of the workmen's compensation commissioners under the law, will ask an investigation by the district attorney of Multnomah county. After several weeks of work. Messrs. Beckwith and Babcock finished in ex amination of the petitions and all evi dence obtained will be turned over to the district attorney. While unwilling for the present to give specific instances of Irregularities they say they have found sufficient duplications of signatures and false addresses to Justify them in aeking for an investigation by the courts. BRIEF NEWS OF OREGON Watson Starts Crusade. Salem. Ralph Watson, corporatioi commissioner, has started a crusadf against corporations which fail to pa their licenses when due. The law re quires that all fees are due July 1 and after July 15 they become delinquent and if not paid by August 15, the cor porations may be fined $100. Thi commissioner will request the various district attorneys to start action, when It is considered necessary, and should they default, he will ask the governoi uojnoasojd imparts b jntoddn o; Indian Lands to Be Sold Goldendale, Wash. Kive hundred and twenty acres of land in 80-acre tracts, on the Yakima Indian reserva tion, will be sold to the highest bidder on July 21 by Don M. Carr, superin tendent of the Yakima agency at Fort Simcoe. The land is the property or non-competent Indians or those who have died and is appraised at 26,OO0. Big Oregon Lumber Mill to Be Rebuilt Hood River. The large mill of iht Oregon Lumber company, controlled by the Eccies interests, which recent ly burned at Hood River, will be re built at once at the same location at Dee, near the junction of the east and west forks of Hood river. It is rlan led to build a mill of the same capa city as the one burned, about 150,000 feet per day, and driven by electricity. Catholic Federation Opens In Seattle Seattle. With Archbishop Christie, of Portland, celebrating a pontifical high mass, assisted by Bishop O'Reilly, of Baker City, Or.; Bishop Lenihan, of Great Falls, Mont,; Bishop O'Dea, of Seattle, and nearly a score of priests, the second annual convention of the Catholic Federation of the State of Washington opened In St. James ca thedral Sunday. LODGE TO SCALE PEAK Enterprise Knights of Pythias Initiate in Clouds. Enterprise. Knights of Pythias ot Enterprise are preparing for a novel mid summer outing an Initiation on the summit of Eagle Cap, a tall peak in the heart of the Wallowa moun tains. The plan has been under con sideration for more than a month and committees of the lodge are now work ing out the details. Grand lodge offi cers have given the project their hear ty approval. Eagle Cap, 10,000 feet high, is 25 miles south of Enterprise. The Knights plan to go out to the base of the peak the first day, camping there for the night The second day will be passed in preparations for the "ceremony in the ky." From the camping ground to the summit is a long and steep climb, up which must be taken paraphernalia of all kinds and part of the camp outfit. The ini tiation will take place at night on the highest point of the peak. As the descent is not safe in the darkness, the lodge members expect to pass the night on the peak. In the morning the party will descend to the meadows at the base of the snowbanks and will return to Enterprise after another rest BALKAN WAR LOSSES ARE OVER 30,000 London. After 10 days of fighting. more severe and deadly In character than anything in the last Balkan war, a little light begins to break on the hitherto obscure operations. The Ser vians have lost more men than in the whole previous campaign. Bulgaria's strategy appears to be to hold the Greeks in check, probably with comparatively small forces, while she deals with Servia. This assump tion, if correct would explain the vic torious advance of the Greek army. Salonikl dispatches continue to re port Greek victories. The Greeks are said to have captured 16 guns at Doir an. Evidence of desperate fighting Is found in the arrival of 8000 wounded at Salonikl, taxing the town's accom modations and resources to the utter most A conservative estimate of the killed and wounded in last week's fighting fixes the number at from 30,000 to 40 000. Thousands of destitute refugees from the scene of the fighting are com ing into Salonikl. The Greeks continue to make whole sale charges against the Bulgarians of burning and pillaging all the villages they abandon and of committing mur ders, mutilation and other horrors. THE MARKETS. Customs Collector Ousted. Marshfield. T. H. Barry has been appointed collector of customs at the port of Empire, vice Major Tower, who was discharged because he had failed to file his resignation. Tower is a prominent old soldier and there is much indignation over his dismissal. The office is to be moved from Empire to Marshfield. Portland. Wheat Club, S2c; bluestem, 96c; red Russian, 90c. Hay Timothy, $18; alfalfa, $13. Butter Creamery, 30c. Eggs Candled, 28c; ranch, 25c. Wool Eastern Oregon, 16c; WU lamette valley, 19c club, 92c Seattle. Wheat Bluestem, 97c red Russian, DOc. Eggs :8c. Butter Creamery, 31c. Hay Timothy, J18 per ton; alla'fa, $13 per ton. For th first time In their history the Sons and liui;hler of the Oregon Pioneers, an organisation eight years old, will have an active part In the next annual reunion, in June, ISM, of the pioneers. V. II. Parker, alias Morton, was ar rested at Salem. He has a long crim inal record as a forger, has served prison terms In three states, and was wanted at Portland for forgeries re contly committed. William llaney. 60 years old. was struck by an automobile at Sutherlln and iustntitly kilted, his head almost severed from hie body. The automo bile, which la s-.id to have been coing at Itiiih speed, contained four young men returning from a celebration at Oakland and was in charge of Charles Parks of Koobi;r. B. R. Faumsnrtt, of I.os Angeles, an astronomer and lecturer, who has traveled In most of the scenic places of the world and who was at Hood River the first of the week to view Mount Hood from the north side, de clared that Hood River scenery is un surpassed In any part of the world. Oregon City business men and 400 OlM.kai-.ia county farmers. Its prin cipal stockholders, are behind the Clackamas Southern railway, which will soon make formal application to the commission council tor a franchise to brim; electric Interur'an cars Into Portland. In the federal court at Portland Judge Wolvcrton ordered In a final decree that J.3!l'0 seres of Oregon Intnl. valued at $:iUKuVWrt, be forfeited J bv the Southern Pacific and that title thereto revert to the government. The defendant company will carry the case to the circuit court ot appeals at San Kratu'sico. Ponald Helms, aged 10, driver of a racing car going at a 50 mile an hour clip, was Instantly killed and Newton H. Mark, mechanician, wai seriously Injured when the 50 horsepower Amer-' lean car Helms was driving turned over twice at a turn In the Fourtn ot July automobile races at the MeJford track. W hat Is believed to be the skeleton of an Indian princess has been un earthed by workmen grading In front of property at Salem. The bones were In sn upright position, and around them were quantities of beads and other rare Indian ornaments. Neat the bones was a stone loot which la believed to have been the totem ol the last of the tribe. As an aid to tourists and those wish lng to gain Information regarding the many places of Interest throughout the country, the department of the interior has Issued circulars giving general Information regarding the na tional parks of the United States. Ol especial Interest to Oregon Is the pam phlet regarding the Crater Lake na tional park Teachers of Hood River county have each received a topographical map ol the district west of Mount Hood. It Is one of the latest publications of the United States topographical survey and is called one of the Atlas sheets t of the Mount Hood quadrangle. If shows In detail the topographical tea tures of the region around Lost Lake and ovej- which the dispute as to the Bull Run road has arisen between Hood River citizens and the Portland water board. Forty thousand copies of the state game and fish laws have been recelv ed at the office of State Game warden Finley, and will be distributed to offl cials throughout the state. They pre sent several radical departures from the laws of last year, and It Is expect ed that It will be some time before they are generally understood. The "alien gun law" makes It necessary for an alien to secure a gun license before he can procure a hunter's per mit. Several changes In the open and closed seasons have been made In some of the more remote sections of the state. Senator Chamberlain has been noti fied by the department of justice that a parole has been granted David West man, and his release from the peni tentiary at McNeil's iBland has been ordered. Westman was the first man convicted In Oregon under the white slave act, his offense being the pur chane of tickets from Portland to Stevenson, Wash., for three women alleced to have been Immoral. In his behalf, it was shown the department, that an account of a Bevere accident when 15 years old, he was not men tally responsible, and a parole was granted so that he might be cared for by his parents. That the Day bill, providing for a special election In November for the reference of bills, will be tested as to Its constitutionality was assured when Dr. Marie Equi and Mrs. J. R. Oatraan, of Portland, asked Secretary of State Olcott to file petitions for the Initia tive of an eight-hour law for women. Mr. Olcott refused to file the petitions, Attorney General Crawford having ad vised him that measures cannot be initiated at the special election, and the women immediately announced that they would institute mandamus proceedings to compel him to do so The petitions have mere than 15,000 names. A Hint to Buyers! OKTKN have we met people, who alter buying at l'ortlaiul or somewhere else, say: Well, I iliJ not know that you sola it at tho tame price," or, "I iliJ not know that you (oik hud it." In buying at homo you have the guarantee of your local merchant behind the goods, and we olten exchange goods, afler our customer discover that they really wanted otuething else. And we in a good many cases can save you juistnge, expreaa or breakage; In shipping. For instance, that phonograph or record you can get right here at the same price as you pay anywhere, and lave express or freight. And it r ally do not pay in the long run to buy inferior goods. Now here are tome things we handle and sell at the same price as any place: WATCH KS Klgin (G. M. Wheeler and 15. V. Kaymond grades), Wallh in, Hatinkn, South Hend, Hamilton, Illin ois, Howard, l'.lo. CLOCKS Seth Thomas, New Haven, Hig Ben. U1NUS Niagara and IJnren City. I'llOSCHittAi'lIS Victor, Columbia. KecunU, (l.'ic up. Needle, any make, 5o per J 00. SKWING MAC1UNKS New Home, New Koyal, Honita, KN1YF.S, Uiilors and Scissors, Hollow liraml. AMMUNITION C. M C. and 1'rters Cartridges. GUNS Remington, Union, Martin. FISH I Mi TACKLK A Complete Line. CROCKF.l.Y In four different patterns. (Open Btotk.) Crook County Jewelry & Sporting Goods Store L. KAMSTRA, Prop. 0 20 BEACH THOUGHTS Are in Season And with them come the suggestion of a trip to Delightful North Beach By The Pacific Reached Via Spend (iffflmA By The Summer W'j) SEA To Portland O-W. R. & N. Columbia River Steamers Beyond You will alwa)6 he glad you spent your Hummer at thin splendid report, where wave and trees combine to add pleasnre to your outing. Let me ell you about it. 6-19-21 H. BAUKOL, Agent, Red.nond Sht-rifi's Sulc on Execution in Fore cIohii re. By virtue of an execution and onler of sitle leaned out of the circuit court for Crook county, state of Oivkoii, upon a )inltiiietit rendered In auld court on the 5th (lay of May, 191.1, In a ult wherein S. '. Caldwell was plulntlff and John W. lalicr wan de fendant. In favor of the above uaiui'd plaintiff and aualimt the above named defendant, for the sum of $395x5, with Interest thereon from the 20th day of March, 191:1, at I la rate of 10 per cent ht annum, and f'aJ.OU attorney' fees and the further sum of $12.00 comIh. which Judgment wan enrolled and docketed In the clerk'M olllce of mild court In mm lil county, on the l'-'th day ol May, 191:1, nnil eoinmanditiK me to Hell, In the manner provided by law, the fol lowing described real property, to wlt: Lot 4-5, tilk 1; lot 12-20, blk 2; lotHl-0, blk 3: loU6-12. blk 4; lot 5-22, blk 5; lot H, blk 6; lot 4-13, blk 7; iottt 4-9, blk 8; lot 4 11 blk 9; lot 5 12, blk 10; lot 1 2, blk 11; lot 1-14, blk 12; lot x.14 blk 13; lot 13 14 blk 14; lot 7 13, blk la, of the town of Harper In Crook county, Ureuon. Notice Ih hereby given that I have levied upon and I will on Silnrd.T, tkt 26tk d.y tf J.ly, 1913, at 2 o'clock In the afternoon at the front door of the courthoiixe In i'rinevllle, On-iron, well to the lilnii eet bidder for chmIi, all the right, title and Intercut the defendant, John W. 1,'Hher, had In nnd to the above dewrllM-d real property on the 5th day of May, 1913, to nntlxfy milil Judgment, Intercut, coete and accru ing coNtn. Said xale Hiihject to re den ptlon a provided by law. Date of flrHt I ubllcatlon.lune 20th, WW. I-HANK Ll.KINH, Sheriff of Crock county, Oregon. .Sheriff' Sale of Kcal Kntate Under Execution in Foreclosure. In the circuit court of the etato of Oregon for the county of Crook. .1. W. Iloone, plaintiff, VH. I'rl S. Mlnkler, defendant. By virtue of an execution tued out ot the above entitled court on the 6th day of May, 1913, In favor of the above named plaintiff, J. W. Iloone, and agalimt the above named defendant, Url S. Mlnkler, up on a Judgment ngalimt the defendant for the Hum of $1709 X5 with IntercMt thereon from the Cth day of May. 1913, at the rate of 10 mt cent icr annum, and $150 attorney lee, and the further hiiiii of $25 cohIm, which Judgment w enrolled and docketed In the clerk' olllce of Hiild court 011 the 12tli day ot May, 1913, and wlierenH, It wan further ordered and decreed by the court that Lot two and three and the cunt half of the HOUthweHt quarter of Hectlon eighteen. towiiHhln fifteen Houth, riniL'e Hcventecn eant of the Willam ette Meridian In Crook county. Mate of Oreicon. tm Hold In the manner preHcrllied by law, notice Ih hereby ittveii that I have levied upon und 1 will, on tho Satardiy, Jul; 19, 1913, at the north front door of the court hoiiHe In Prtnevllle. Oregon, at the hour ot 2 o'clock in the afternoon of ald day. Hell all the right, title and IntereHt the nald defendant, I'rl S. Mlnkler. had In and to the above de HcrllM-d real property to the hlgheHt bidder, to HatlHfy nald Judgment, In terewt, cohIh and accruing cont, mib- Ject. to redemption according to law I'lrat publication June 19, 1913. Frank 1Ci.ki.nh, Sheriff of Crook county. Oregon. Ily W. K. Vun Allen, deputy. I-'ilrHi votir Deed? Of Course. HAVE YOU An Al,trni-l) (Wteilnly everyone Ionian alwlract IH veil know ttner your v-taiierB m. Weil, No, Nut eiactly. Brewtter Engineering Company, I'niiuville, Oregon, will locate them lor ...... ....1 .,.! tl,.t wiirk Stirvev- iK, I'Uiiln. Irrigation hiliivriti(. I'lion I'l'iiniT 'M. If f JP lAl(e moeUeveryTuct- U. U. r day niuht. Stranger welcome. tii:o. Nolii.it. N. II.; Ibl'T Bahn, V. ti.j.T. lCo..n,Hec. ; C. II. I'imh iu uk, Trrean Local Representative Wanted -by-Large Leading Nursery We want a ieriiineiit reprnaentative fur IhU ilmtili t Mut he a toii i! good atandinn and charaeter and I1011I1I have wiine kiiowleilitn of horticulture. Mint he able In devote all your time In the InmitiPM. I'ldeM you aiu inuking ' tl.m 00 per month, you are not dolnn I well vim uliould. Many of our le. men make from .Mt 00 to ir.'..00 wr I week. Orrmi) tree are know 1 lhnmKhoiit thi t uetntl rlH-l!y reliable, Munly, (mil grow em. early U-ar. r and dinting 110 mora than lota of treea that are not nraily an gotHi. vie have but on r prearnlallve III each ter ritory. V e awont you in every iiiimilile way. Uur iiiiranry la reeogniuMi mo Urgent and moat Uvorahly known til tin entire went, thir terma are lllieral. II vou want a riiinenl, good paving iioillioii with an iiiirtuinty ol enlarg ing your Held of activity, wnte to day, tiive lefervnce. paul occupation, etc., with .-our Ural letter. Oregon Nursery Company Orenco, Oregon -ft .tin ol Content iH-piirtiiient of the Interior, l ulled .Slate Laud Olliie, The Inllc, Oregon, J line II, lul l. In John M. Weatfiill, ol rrlllevllle, t Iregoll, CoUtcatec. You are hereby notified that Tlioiu a l.uwe. who give Prliii'VlHc, Ore gon, can- ol J.I-:. Itoliert", a hi poet olllce addrcw, did on May 23, 1913, tile In thi othre hi duly corrobor ated application to roiitral and e cure the cancellation ot your home, ateiid. erlal No. 07100. made J inn 27, 1910. (or i i V acctlon I7,ti nw J, mvtloti 20; towtndilp 17 Houth, rnnue i; enat, Willamette meridian, nnd 11 a ground for hi content he allege that Hitld John M. Weal (all ha whol ly abandoned anld tract for over two vein hint pat ; that he ha wholly ialled to realde upon, Improve or cultivate nld land for over two year lat pat, or at all alnce milk ing Raid entry. Vou are, then-lore, further notified that the ald iillegallou will U taken by till olllce a having Ixvn i-iinli-Hw'd by you. and your uld en try will lie caiHclcil uiervuimcr witn oiit your further right to U heard then-Ill, either la-lore thlx olllceiir on npiicnl, If you fall to lile In thl olllce within tweiitv day after the l ()l IH U publication of thl notice, ll ahown below, your llliauer, under oath, HpiTlllcally meeting and re xpoiidltig to tin ae iillegallou of con tent, or If you lull within that time to Hie In thl ollico due proof that )ou have nerved a copy of your aiiHWer on the nald conlentant either In pcrnon or by reglatered mall. If HiIb nervlre i made by the delivery ol a copy of your iiiihwit to the con tenlnnt in H'roii, proof of mu ll acr vice iiiuat lie either the nald route! nut' written acknowledgment of hi receipt of the copy, nhowlng the date of It receipt, or the allldavlt ot the pcrnon by w hom the delivery w aa luade, Mtatlug when and where tin copy wiim delivered; It made by rcgla tered mull, proof ol audi ervlce niuat eotihlt of the nllhlnvlt of the mtoii by whom the ropy wa mailed dat ing when anil the inmt olllce to which It wiih mailed, and thl allldavlt miiat be accompanied by the pont nwiHter' receipt for the letter. toiiHhonlil Htate in your ntiNwer the name of the tioat olllce to which yon denlre future notice to be netil to you. l . Vt . .mooiik, KegiHlcr I inte of Hrt publication, June 19. " " necotid publication, June2ri. " " third publication, July 3. " " fourth publication, July 10. Lot for Sale Cheap KcHldenee lotH, clone In, near public Hchuul. Imiulic of Wude Huetuu. ;7-3 Notice to Creditors Notice ia herehv uiven that the under- aigned liua been, dy the county court ot the atate ot Oregon lor Crook county. duly appointed ailniinintriitrix ol the estate ol hlmer t lark, deceaaeil, and all pel-anna having clniuiH auuinat aiiiil es tate are hereby required to present the aiinie, duly vermeil, to aniil ailiiilniatra- trix a! the law office nf M K. Brink, in the city ol rriiicville, Crook county, atate of Oregon, within aix month from the date of the lirnt puh'icutiou u( thia notice. Dated and uiiblinhcd lirat time Muy 29th, 1913. 1'HANCI H Cl.AKK, Administratrix ol the eHlute ol Klmer Clark, duveaaud, 0-2IMH Wanted. Viahennen to call at KainHtra's ("tore (or that particular Rod, Line, Leader or Hook. LargcHt selection. 5 15 Toppenish Nursery Co. Ar Promptnets and Quality of Service Any Interest to You? RVhMit Rt'ttlnir tlio hlKliritt utriIp nf tmrtn'ry Km k to he ohfritnt'ii, In It not Importiiul Hint you K?t H (rmii rt'llKMo enncrrti, oim that U in liiilnM to Bitty, ri'tuly to ink tnr n( you for yi'Hm to coimi, it ml onu Mint Ih liMr mint'tl to ifivo hki In fuel iuii? Our iloHlrn to feu re votir IhinIhonn Ik only oxetHu It'll l,y our tlt'termlnatlon to hut It It We have a Hplcinliil lot of all ttie ntlo fruit, hailt and nrimnifiititl ntot k for dvlivory ilia t-oinliiK (all and HprttiK "fUNniiN. tlirlftp, m'nture lliarily and Mdtndldly runted, ll la tlm olasa ofHiot'k vou 11 1 fur vour vnlunldo ort'harU and. EVERY TREE IS GUARANTEED, Toppenish Nursery Company Toppenish, Waili, Unturpnaartl Nurarry Sttn k Grown in the Knmous Ynkima Vttllpy. Mnrn Active Salesmen Wanted. .t-:'1) I When in tlm niui'lii't for I,iiui, Co I imsiit Hnd SliiniiloH, hko tlm Itodniotid ' Lmnbei & I'roducu Co. U Ii7-2iu