Crook County journal. (Prineville, Or.) 189?-1921, July 10, 1913, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    NEWS FROM OUR
NATIONAL CAPITAL
Senator Simmons Says Tariff
Bill Will Reach President
Last of August.
Washlngton-Wlth tha Urlff bill
computed b)The senate caucus, 111
leaders feel certain (bat the
measure will be la the banda of lha
president by (ha latter part of August.
K1ve weeks la tlia tlma Benetor Him
nious, bo will bava tba bill In chare.
believes will ba Daadad. Kepubllcan
maturs, however, lualat that It will
take much mora tlma.
Korty seven democrat lo aanatura
stood up In tha party raucua ona by
one and declared their luteutlun to
vota for the Underwood Hlmniona Ur
Iff revision bill aa finally approved by
tha caucus.. Two tension, Kanadell
and Thornton, of Ixulana, aald that
they would not ninke aurh promise be
ruuee of the propoaal to place tugar
on the free lint In ll)l. Henetors
Hitchcock of Nebraska and Culberson
of Tnua wrre abamit, but both are
known to be In favor of the bill. Thla
gives the di'inix-rata 48 voire for the
bill or a ali'tidi-r majority of one, with
the vote of the vice nrewlili-ul to full
buck on In an emergency.
Resolution Not Binding.
An absolutely 111 nil In a roaoltitlon
wns Dot adnptod, the poll by Individu
al! being substituted, and Hint poll
wua put only on the ground of person
al promlae und wna not made binding.
A reaolutlon wns adopted, however,
declurl.ig the t'nderwood Hlmmona
bill a party measure and urging It
Ulidlvliled aupport without amendment
unless audi ahould be submitted by
the committee.
llefore final action on the bill the
rnucua guve conri-aaloua to the eeti- I
alors from woolgrowlng atntea hf
adopting an amendment making ef
fective a provision for free ruw wool
In December 1. 1913. and the rates on
manufacturea uf wool January 1, 1914.
Mulhall'a Story of Lobbying Told.
How the Nntlnnnl Association of
Manufacturers, through Ita hired lob
bylnte at Washington, aecured leglsla
Hon favorable to Ita Interests, obtained
the defeat of measures beneficial to
the labor Interests, how It controlled
Congreaalonul rommltteea, made and
unmade aennlnra and representatives,
und how It levied tribute on all manu
facturing Intereata great and small
throughout the country, wna explained
by the aenaiitlouiil exposures of Ci Ion
el M. M. Mulhall, for 10 yeara the lob-
Brief News of the Week
According to flgurea given out at
Chicago; a tolal of 3G0 deatha occurred
from heat proetratlona in different
eaatern cltlea during the recent hot
apell.
The New York board of health line
adopted resolution wblch practically
forblda the use of the Kiiedmnna ser-
um In the treatment of patient la
that city.
The annual national reunion of the
llcnrvolent and Protective Order of
Kike aaaembled Monday at Hoobeatvr,
N. Y., for a aeaalon of all daya.
Evidences thut aerloua fighting la
occurring In Macedonia la found In
the arrival of lnrge nuuibera of wound
ed and prisoners at the varloui Bal
kan capltala.
Mlmicaolu will collect approximate
ly 115.000 In coata from the Northern
I'aclflc and Oreat Northern railway
aa the reault of the United 8tatei su
preme court'! declalon In the Minne
sota rate cane.
Slileen dead and 784 Injured the
total of the "aune Fourth" accident
compiled at Chlcugo from report! from
all over the country. Moat of the vie-
tlma lived In the smaller cities.
Two electric train! met on a curve
while carrying pnaaengera to and from
an Kike' Purple day celebration near
Ogdun, Utah, resulting In four deatha
and acore of Injured. One motor-
mnn dlaobeyed ordera. It la mid.
While thousand! of provincial sol
dlere wore fmradlng the itreeta at
Winnipeg, Man., July 4, young Amer-
bylat, field worker and atrlkebrenker lean waved the United Stall-! flag. A
of the organlintlon, before the lenate mob of civilian! tore It from hli grasp
Investigation committee called Into and trampled It lu the afreets.
MISS JESSIE WILSON
V t tv.y
Miss Jsssls Wilson, scone daughter
of President Wilson, whose sngiae-
ment to New Vork lawyer has been
announced. .
exlstonce by President Wilson's
rhurgea that an "Insidious lobby" ex
Uts and has existed at tlio national
capital for ninny years.
Witness' Confession la Aatoundlng,
A story of ttilHrepreaentntlon, Imper
sonation of public men and orgnnlxed
effort to Influence Wull street finan
ciers probably without parallel In the
history of congressional Investigation;
wits unfolded before the senate lobby
committee by a prosperous-looking,
self possessed Individual, calling him
self David 1nmar. of New York, self
described as an operator In stocks"
and admittedly the bearer of several
assumed names. With entire abandon,
nrouHlng the committee to luughter at
times by his naive admlssloua, he told
of his Impersonations, hla participa
tion tn attempts to Influence Wall
street. He telephoned to financial
men and lawyera tn th names of
Representative Palmer and Kepresen
tatlv Rlordan. He assumed the gulso
of Chairman MoCombs, of tha Demo
cratic national committee, to telephone
to Chairman Miles, of the Republican
national committee.
National Capital Brevities
Senator Hitchcock of Nebraska
withdraw from th democratic caucus
when hla proposed tariff bill amend
ment for a graduated tax on tobacco
production wbb defeated. A spirited
scene followed.
Attorney General McReynolda has
dismissed Judge Clayton Harrington
from the department of Justice at San
Francisco. Herrington had criticised
the federal authorities in connection
with tho Dlggs-Cnmlnettl case.
The interstate commerce commis
sion will have to got along In its great
tank of making a physical valuation
of railroads without the assistance of
the army engineers unless congress
can be Induced to pass special legis
lation. Government officials are greatly in
terested in the reported achievement
of Dr, GoldBchmldt, a German Inventor
of wireless uppurntus, In sending mes
sages between Neustadt, near Han
over, Germany, and Tuckerton, N. J.,
8900 miles.
The American people drank more
whlBkey and beer, smoked more cigars
and cigarettes and chewed more tobac
co during the fiscal year 1913 than In
any other yearly period of the nation's
history, according to estimates based
on the reoord-breaklng internal rev
enue receipts of the federal govern
ment for tbe 12 months ended June 80.
An Injunction wns grunted by Cir
cuit Judge Galloway at Salem, Ore.
ngutnat Secretary of State Olcott to
restrain the calling of a special elec
tion In November for the reference of
bills. A demurrer, filed by Attorney-
(lenenil Crawford, wua overruled by
the court and notice of appeal was
given. The case will be argued before
the Supreme Court next week.
The notable, gatherings of the week
Include the annual convention of tho
National Kducnllon association, In Salt
I.nke City; the National Conference
of Charities and Correction, In Seattle,
and the International convention of
Christian Endeavor societies, In Los
Angeles.
Work is to commence within IB daya
on tbe Rutte-Ilolse-Wlnnemucca rail
road, according to announcement of
L. O. Leonard, president of the $40,
000,000 corporation. He say that
within 10 days contracts will b let
for the grading of the first link of the
road east and west out of Boise. The
Butte-Bolse-Wlnnemucca has a right of
way south Vnd west out of Boise to
Wlnnemucca, Nev., and north and east
to Butte, Mont., crossing four divide
to reach the Montana metropolis.
People in the News
The University of Edinburgh, Scot
land, haa conferred the honorary de
gree of doctor of laws upon James
Wilson, former secretary of agricul
ture of the United States.
Ellen Terry and her husband, James
Cnrew, emphatically denied the report
that they hud separated.
Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, with
his two sons, Archie and Quentin, ia
to spend two months camping In the
Q rand Canyon of Arizona.
An offer of $42,000 for the restora
tion of the Y. M. C. A. buildings at
Dayton, Hamilton and Marietta, Ohio,
bus been received from John D. Rocke
feller, Jr. They were badly damaged
by the March floods.
President and Mrs. WilBon have an
nounced the engagement of their sec
end daughter, Jessie Woodrow Wilson,
to Francis Bowes Sayre of Lancaster,
Penn. The wedding will take plac at
the white house In December. Mr.
Sayre 1 at present an attorney In th
office of District Attorney Whitman
of New York.
B. L. Wlnchell, formerly president
of tha St, Louis and San Francisco
railroad and later receiver for that
system, has been appointed director
of tratflo for tha Union Pacific
NATIONAL BANKS FAIL
IN PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburg First-Second National
Cause of Failure of Other
Institutions.
Pittsburg. The First Second Na
tional Bank of Pittsburg, the First
National Bank of McKeesport,
neighboring city; th American Wat
erworks A Guarantee Company and
tha banking houaa of J. 8. and W. 8.
Kuhn, Incorporated, of this city, were
forced Into the hands of a receiver.
through tbe failure of th first-named
Institution to open It door Tuesday.
Th closing of the First-Second Na
tional Bank waa ordered by th Con
troller of the Currency, T. P. Kne,
after every effort bad been made to
meet the government requirement as
to th legal reserve.
The Kuhn banking bouse ha ex
tensive Interests In Irrigation project
throughout tbe west and mines and
street traction system throughout
western Pennsylvania, bealdes being
a dominant factor In tbe American
Waterworks k Guarantee company.
W. S. Kuhn waa president of the
First-Second National Bank, vice
president and director in the bunking
house and vice president and director
of the American Waterworks ft Car
antee company, Wide being t. di
rector of the McKeesport bank. J. 8.
Kuhn was a director of the First-Sec
ond bank and president and director
of the American Waterworks ft Guar
antee company, besides being a direc
tor of the McKeesport bank and chair
man of the board of director f the
baoklag house.
Wushlnglon. Secretary McAdoo In
statement declared that the general
bunking condition In Pittsburg, as
well aa In the entire country, waa
strong aud sound and that he expect
ed no further trouble as a result of
the failure of the Pittsburg First-Sec
ond National bank.
The failure of th Pittsburg bank
simply a sporadic case of unsound
banking and has no other signifi
cance," the secretary said. He added
that the receivership for this Institu
tion removed a long standing "sore
spot" In the Pittsburg situation, leav
ing the general condition In that city
sound.
Trade at Home
"Kvtry time you go to town
And itart to throw your money around,
Bay "Home-made goo if are tbe stuff tor me,
Fecauie they ipell Proe-per-i-tv."
The dollar you lend to tbe Eastern Store
Say "Good-bye Bill" (or evermore.
But tbe dollar you ipend with the Home-made loond
Keepe a'comin' and a'comin' and a'comin' around."
A. H. Lippman & Co.
19 Imo
Crook County Bank
PRINEVILLE, OREGON
AmH
Ijoana
Overdraft
Banklnl Huuh
Caali aud JUtiui....
Total...
W. A. Booth. Pres.
I UWlfrtra
. IIS 7M.24 Capital paid Id full
?Mia Hurplui ,
unainaea pronis ,
14.UJV.fi0
6S.4Z1.7S
.M.S70.M
Deposit
..(M.ooo.ae
,. M.0U0.00
,. 7.r.os
. 161.W7.4H
D. T. Btiwakt. VIce-PiM.
L. A. Bootb, Assistant Ceibler
CM. Elk iwa, Cashier
Oregon Bank Robber 8oon Caught
Portland. Following the sensational
holdup of the First State bunk of Mll-
wnukle, Ore., Saturday afternoon and
a daring effort to make away with his
booty, Virgil Perrlne, the robber, was
captured two hours later within the
llmlta of the town. He was found 1m
meraed to his head In the water under
water works wheel, and dynamite
wns used by the posse in effecting his
capture.
STRIKERS CONTROL
SITUATION IN RAND
Johannesburg. The settlement of
the strike among the gold miners In
the llnnd district, which the govern
ment arranged with a committee of
trlker Saturday, proved Ineffective.
The mobs reassembled Sunday. All
trains and streetcars suspended ser-
Ice, the crews refusing to work.
Except at the time of the Jameson
raid In 1896 and the outbreak of the
war in 1899 this city has not experi
enced such a day of terrorism as Sat
urday. The mobs in the business sec
tion caused lesB fear than desperadoes
who were threatening to dynamite the
home of the wealthy.
The rioting began when strikers
forced their way Into the Rand Club,
whoa members are mine-owners.
They demolished everything on the
ground floor. Three time dragoons
scattered the mob, but it quickly re
formed. The troops fired a volley
over the heads of the rioters, and then
two volleys directly Into their ranks.
Revised figures show that about 20
persons were killed and 150 wounded
on Saturday, and that 100 were killed
or wounded Friday.
The drunkard will have none of me.
The heavy drinker says "no" when my
name is mentioned.
The man who craves rough strong
whiskey passes me by.
All this is as it should be as I myself
would wish it. I am not for them.
Cyrus Noble
W. J. Van Schuyver & Co., General Agents
Portland, Oregon
MflRfRtijtf
weistheAnswerjHi
: WEBSTER5
New International
Tat Humm worra
Ivrr dr Id your talk and mdlar. al
aom, on tlx .trn-t at. In l! oflu.. boa
M m ttoA yea lilulr aoatron Uw SMma
l"!?'."? word. A friend artat
hat nafcM morUr haroVnf roe k
th. UntuM n t Ltk JT.rrtwor th. pran
cUUoa of Jmjmtm V. k.t K mkil. nmO
Tnj New Creattaa tnnrni all kixla of
fetation. In Uniuw..HuurT.BiphT,
ricuon.For.lrn Worila, IrmlM, AruTsad
mmWanJa,
OOO HliratraUax
Ctmt 4O0,000.
7e r.s.a.
TTw only dk-tHnutrr with
Um mm aU.uba-.awTh
Kterwrd as "A strata ef
Oralua.
rMUtlw
O i thla. opaque, Strang,
India paper. What a aat-fiu-tlon
to own VitMrnrimm
webater In a form ao Uf lit
maa ao convenient to ur
una nair in. mwunrm and
wcicbtof kfffuial KoiUob,
BtwIarCartlaat
On atroo book naprr. Wt,
tnua. siaauftxs,
inches.
WnttkevadM
UlartralMB ala.
a. Z. I
m m m mirr-
WBtOeffitinifnniiWTrafnn
Express and Passenger
Stage Line
Three hour bet ween Redmond and Prineville, fare $1.50.
Agent for Xurtehru. Gt. Northern and American Exprtn
(Mice open from 7 a. m to 6 p. ra.; Sunday 9 to 1 :30,
viuce at rioneer ureuiu .o.
press Co.
12-19
Jourdan & Son
CUBAN CHIEF OF POLICE SHOT
Platol Fight Outoome of Raid on
Gambling Club.
Hnvana. General Amarando Riva,
chief of the national police, was shot
and mortally wounded during a pistol
fight in the most crowded portion of
the Prado.
General Ernest Asbert, governor of
Havana province, Senator Vldul Mo
rales and Representative Arias were
involved in the fighting, which was
the outcome of a raid made by Gener
al Riva Saturday night on the Asbert
Club, when a large number of mem
bers were caught gambling.
General Riva, while driving with his
two young sons, stopped his cartlage
in front of the Asbert Club and caused
the arrest of the door-keeper for il
legally carrying a revolver.
Asbert, Morales and Arias arrived
In an automobile about the same time
and a heated dispute arose, and tha
shooting followed.
Just Opened :
Livery Feed and Sale Stable
In Comett Stage Barn
Prineville Oregon
Special attention given to the traveling Public
Hay 25c a day per head.
Give us a call.
White & Mackey, Props.
Shingles, Mouldings, Windows,
y Doors, Glasses, Etc. Etc., Eto.
SHIPP & PERRY
PRINEVILLE, OREGON
THE HAMILTON STABLES
J. H. WIGLE, Proprietor
PRINEVILLE, OREGON
Stock boarded by the day, week or month at
Reasonable rates. Remember us when
Prineville. Rates Reasonable. We have
in
Fine Livery Rigs For Rent
-Notice of Contest
Department of the Interior.
In I ted States Land Office,
The Dalle, Oregon. June 25, 1913.
To John A. Marks, of Melno, Wash
ington, Contmtee:
You are hereby notified that WU.
Ham H. Poet, who jrlvee Poet, Ore
gon, aa his poet office arldnni), did
on Mav 29, 1913, file In this office hla
duly corroborated application to
contest and eecure the cancellation
of your homestead, aerial No. 09282,
made January 23. 1912, for ej awl,
swj aej, nwj gi, section 26, town
ship 15 eouth, range 19 eaut, Willa
mette Meridian, and as grounds for
his contest be alleges that said John
A. Marks haa wholly abandoned said
tract of land for over six month
last past; that he baa wholly failed
to reside upon, Improve or cultivate
said tract of lund as required by law
or hi an since making aaui entry,
that be Is not now absent from said
homestead by right, 0f leave of ab
sence filed according to law.
You are, therefore, further notified,
that tbe said allegations will be
taken by this office aa having been
confessed by you, and your said en
try will be canceled thereunder with
out your further right to lie beard
therein, either before this office or on
appeal, If you fail to file tn this office
within twenty days after the
FOURTH publication of this notice,
as shown below, your answer, under
oath, specifically meeting and re
sponding to theee allegations of con
test, or if you fail within that time
to file In this office due proof that
you have served a copy of your
answer on the said contestant either
in person or by registered mall. If
this service Is made by the delivery
of a copy of your answer to the con
testant In person, proof of such ser
vice must be either the said contes
tant's written acknowledgment of
his receipt of the copy, showing the
date of its receipt, or the affidavit of
the person by whom the delivery
was made stating when and where
the copy was delivered; if made by
registered mall, proof of sueh service
must consist of the affidavit of the
person by whom the copy was mail
ed stating when and the postotilce
to which it was mailed, and this af
fidavit must be accompanied by the
postmaster's receipt for the letter.
You should state In your answer,
the name of the postotlice to which
you desire future notices to be sent
to you.
H. Frank Woodcock, Register.
Date of first publication July 3.
Date of second publication July 10.
Date of third publication July 17.
Date of fourth publication July 2L
Summons.
In the county court of the state of
Oregon for Crook county.
Jack Brogan, plaintiff,
vs.
Philip Brogan, defendant.
To Philip Brogan, the above named
defendant :
In the name of the state of Oregon,
You are hereby required to appear
and answer the complaint of plain
tiff filed against you In the above en
titled action within ten days from
the date of the service of this sum
mons upon you, if served within
Crook county, state of Oregon, or,
if served within any other county In
this state, then within twenty days
from the date of the service of this
summons upon you, or, if served by
publication thereof as provided by
law, then on or before the
9th d.T of Ann.it. 1913.
and you are hereby notified that It
you fail to so appear or answer, for
want thereof the nlaiutiff will take
judgment against you for the sum
oi styt.iz, with interest on $186.09
thereof at the rate of six tier cent. Tier
annum from the 81st day of May,
1913, and for the costs and disburse
ments of this action.
1 his summons is nnhllnherl in th
Crook County Journal for six full
weeks In seven consecutive ami HI1C-
cesslve Issues thereof, commencing
with the Usue of June 2fith. 1913. hv
order of the Hon. G. Springer, Judge
of the above entitled court, made
and entered on the 26th day of June,
Dated and nnhllHlipr) first tlma
June 2th, lliia.
M. E. Brink,
Attorney for plaintiff.
Notice to Creditors
Notice Is hereby given by the undertime!
the administrator of the estate of Soren Rob
ert Hendlxsen. deoeased, to the creditors o'
said estate and all persons having claims
against the same to present such claims to
1. K. J, Duffy, attorney for said estate, at
Prineville, Oregon, or to charlea A. Sherman,
administrator at Fife. Oregon, within six
months irom the first publication or this
notice.
Dated and published the first time this 2th
day of May, 1B1.
. . , , CHAS. A. SHERMAN,
wihvw vm UU1SU AWIU,
ifeDalxseu, deoeased.