OREGON NEWS NOTES OF GENERALJNTEREST Events Occurring Throughout the State During the Past Week. No Petition Filed; Blank Ballots. Salem. The voters of Salem will be resented with a blank ballot at the ttty primaries November 3, according to a discovery made by City Recorder Elgin, lis found a law passed by the last legislation providing that In city primaries nominating petitions must be filed 30 days before the day of flection. This time has passed and aot a single petition has been Med, although a number are in circulation. Will Defend Minimum Wags Law. Salem. Attorney General Crawford has been requested to defend the min imum wage commission in the Injunc tion suit brought to restrain the com mission from enforcing tts order regu lating the wages of women employed m factories. He expects to go to Port kind to confer with the commission bout the case, which will test the constitutionality of the law creating the commission. Huntsmen Give Big Feast. Riddle. State officials, expert rifle shots, a majority of the leading sports men of Southern Oregon and farmers throughout the valley participated In the first annual barbecue given by the Xiddle Elk Supporting Rod and Gun Club. Bucks were roasted whole and salmon were barbecued. The public schools adjourned at noon that the scholars might enjoy the festivities. Siskiyou Gold Is Found. Medford. While working on the mew survey for the permanent high way over the Sisklyous the gang of men under Assistant State Highway Xnglneer Klttridge struck a three-toot gold ledge, which caused so much ez altemeot that work was suspended the zest of the dsy. A. D. Walters, a mem terof the gang, returned to Medford with a basket of ore, which, local min ing men declare of a high grade. wd LAND LOTTERY PROTESTED Eastern Oregon Residents Prefer Old Way of Settlement. Washington. Vigorous protest has teen made by residents of Eastern Oregon against the opening by the lot tery system of some 300,000 acres of kind that are soon to be eliminated from the Paulina and Deschutes na tional forests. Representative Sinnott, to whom these protests were made, took the matter up with Land Commissioner TaHman. The commissioner said there lad been no definite determination as to the method of opening, but in about two weeks the question will be set tled. The commissioner thought the department might eventually decide to open these lands In the usual way, throwing them open to settlement on some date to be fixed and opening them to entry 30 days later, thus glv tog settlers the preference right of entry. Tomato Like a Doughnut. Cottage Grove. A tomato grown by 8. W. Sheary has the shape of a big doughnut, including the hole. The tern by which the fruit was held U plant was attached inside the hole, which was about an Inch and a quar ter in diameter. A rough line encir cles the freak, giving it the appear ance of having been sewed together. Library Opinion Divided. Klamath Falls. Controversy over the action of the county court is re vealed by the contemplated circula tion of a remonstrance against the building of the new (20,000 Carnegie library on the famous "courthouse" block. County Road Is Street. Salem. The attorney general has tendered an opinion to the county Judge of Lincoln county that a county road running through a town automat ically becomes a street when the town is Incorporated, and the maintenance ef the street thereafter devolves on the town. Mistaken for Deer, Is Killed. Medford. Elmer Conger, 28 years Id, living oh a ranch near Jackson ville, was shot and killed in the Dead Indian country, the other side of Ash land, when mistaken for a deer by an other member of the hunting party. , Dufur Apple Harvest On. Dufur. The apple harvest is on In this valley and t'se apples are of an xceptionally fine quality this year and have colored better than ever be fore. War on Squirrels Starts. Alrlle. Unusual attempts are being Bade to get rid of the squirrels and other pests which destroy crops and Injure young walnut and filbert orchards. VEN'JSTIANO CARRANZA i Vrir ? t v ; Venustlano Carranxa, governor of Coahulla, Mexico, leader of the rebels In northern Mexico. GOVERNOR SULZER REMOVED Extreme Penalty of Disqualification Unanimously Withheld. Albany. N. T. William Sulier ceas ed to be governor of the state of New York. He was removed from office by the high court of imoeachment By a virtually unanimous vote also the Impeachment tribunal decided that Sulaer should not be punished by dis qualification to hold office of honor and trust in this state in the future. In going out of office Sulier Issued a statement In which he denounced the tribunal which removed him as "Murphy's high court of Infamy." He asserted he had not taken the stand In his own defense because he realiz ed thst his story attacking the Tam many leader would be ruled out Sulzer Nominated in Assembly Race. New York. William Sulier, im peached as governor of the state, was nominated for the Assembly by the progressives of the sixth assembly district Mr. Sulier has agreed to accept the nomination. Southern Pacific Wins Contention. San Francisco. The first arbltra tion held between a westers railroad and iu employes under the Newlands arbitration act was accomnllshed when the arbiters tiled their findings and award in the dispute between the Southern Pacific company and the or ganisation of engineers, conductors and trainmen. The majority opinion of the arbiters upheld the contentions of the Southern Pacific on the distinc tion between street car service and suburban electric service. RESIGNATION DENIED BY PRESIDENT HUERTA Mexico City. In a brief statement President Huerta denounced as base less that he .was contemplating resign ing or fleeing from the capital. Persons close to the president de clare that he has received sufficient assurances of support from the army heads as well as from the provincial governors and Is satisfied that the revolt in the north will soon be ended with the recapture of Torreon by the strong federal force now being con centrated upon the city. Ten of the Imprisoned deputies were set free, there being no evidence that they had taken part in a conspiracy. Seventy-four of the remaining 100 were formally held for trial In the federal district court on charges of sedition, rebellion and contumacy. Troop Train Wreck Kills 20 Soldiers. Meridian, Miss. Twenty soldiers were killed and about 100 hurt when a special troop train on the Mobile & Ohio railroad was wrecked. On the train were 179 officers and men, all members of Company 17, coast artil lery, U. S. A. J. J. Hill Badly Shaken In Wreck. Winona, Minn James J. Hill, the railroad magnate, was badly shaken up but not hurt much at Nelson, near here, when a Burlington north bound express train, with Hill's private car attached, collided with a southbound passenger train. Fireman Elliott of the southbound train was instantly killed and several other persons were slightly Injured. THE MARKET8. Portland. Wheat, New Crop Club, 79c; blue stem, 90c; red Russian, 78c. Hay Timothy, $16; alfalfa, $13. Butter Creamery, 34c. Eggs Candled, 36c. Seattle. Wheat, New Crop Bluestem, 89c; club, 80c; red Russian, 78c. Hay Timothy, $17 per ton; alfalfa, $13 per ton. Eggs 36c. Butter Creamery, 3Jc. BRIEF NEWS OF OREGON A natatorlum Is to be added to Seaside's list of summer amusements before another season. Milk testing devices have been re ceived by the pupils of the publto schools of Polk county. The Southern I'nrlfic Railroad com pany Is settling Its taxes of more than $57,000 In Jackson county. The government forestry service has begun to bum timber tracts in South ern Oregon which arc Infected with the pine beetle. Oregon is to have an official exhibit at the Eighth International Dry-Farming Congress and Exposition In Tulsa October $1 to November 1. A fountain, constructed on Corin thian lines and mads In Klamath Falls, has Just been tendered to the city by L. M. Schofleld. Freewater has taken steps to build the first link In the proposed macad amised road from Walla Walla to Pen dleton. Three hundred apple packers of Hood River formed an association to adopt a schedule of packing rates and maintain a uniform system of pack ing. A number of road districts of Clack amas county are planning to levy a special tax. The county court Is In favor of better roads being built throughout the county. A hen, which Is a cross between a Plymouth Rock and a Whits Leghorn, raised at the Oregon Agricultural Col lege, broke the world's record by lay ing 291 eggs in a year. A local option election will be held at Dufur November 4. Petitions were circulated so quietly that only a few of the 'wets" were aware of the plan until the petitions were filed. From effects of Injuries sustained In a fall down a flight of stairs Mrs. Cordelia Mills, aged 81, died at Keno. The woman never recovered conscious ness after the fall A second crop of strawberies Is be ing harvested by R. J. Tsylor, of In dependence. There will be on the av erage of a pound to the plant, or 50 boxee In alL Klamath Falls Is planning to build hitching racks. The city will secure a tract of land near the business sec tion tor the accommodation of farm ers' teams. Joseph Schafer, Ph. D.. for 13 years head of the history department of the University of Wisconsin, has assumed the duties of general director of the Diversity of Oregon extension division. His office will be at Eugene. Crater Lake being Inland and under the control of the state police, Stato Game Warden Finley can Impose a li cense on persons who fish In It, states Attorney-General Crawford, in an opin ion for Governor West A force of engineers under the di rection of Louis GriBwoid and W. W. Peters of the state highway commis sion, has begun the work of surveying route between Astoria and West- port. The annual convention of the Ore gon State Editorial Association met in Portland. Nearly 75 editors, rep resenting as many newspapers, were present when Colonel E. Hoter called the convention to order. J. C. La France, convicted of swind ling the Modern Woodmen of America out of $3000 by planting a body as his own on the Clackamas river, was sen tenced to from one to five years in the penitentiary by Circuit Judge Kava- naugh at Portland. The hearing in the case of Dallas vs. H. V. Gates, owner of the water system at Dallas, has been set by the railroad commission for October 28, at Dallas. The complaint alleges that excessive charges are being made for the water. The Oregon Trunk railway traffic department reports that 32,000 sheep have been shipped from Bend during the past 10 days, probably the great est export movement of sheep In so short a period ever known in the state. The sheep are to be fed in Montana In transit for the Chicago market. Governor West will not consider ex tending clemency to Mike Spanos and Frank Seymour, sentenced to be hanged October 31 for the killing of George Dedeskalous, in Medford, who. in a signed statement, attempted to fasten the crime on Thomas Fricas, until a complete investigation has been made. That Oregon ranks first In the per centage of attendance of school chil dren is a statement made by the school superintendent of Erie county, Pa., n a letter received from him by Su perintendent of Public Instruction Churchill. The writer says that his information was obtained from the comparative study of school systems n the various states as compiled by the Russell Sage Foundation. ' Representative Hawley has Intro duced bills appropriating $100,000 each for the purchase of sites and the erec tion of public buildings at Oregon City, Corvallis, Ashland and Grants Pass. He also has Introduced a bill authorizing the establishment of a life saving station at the mouth of the Suiulaw river and one authorizing the establishment of a mining experiment station at Grants Pass. Central Garage Phone No. 20 Agents for Chalmers and Detroiter Autos All Kindt or Auto Repairing Tires Vulcanized Full Line of Auto Supplies Special Price on New and Second-Hand Auto Huff-Maker Auto Co. Best-Hated ; N the spreaderless farm the thoutrht hard work. It must nil be loaded on high wagons. It must be raked off in piles in the fields. Then every forkful must be shake a apart and spread. Compare that old-fashioned method with the I II C spreader way. You pitch the manure into the spreader box, only waist high, drive out and the machine does all the rest. And it spreads evenly and far less wastefully. I H C Manure Spreaders are farm necessities. The man who uses one will get the price of it back in increased crops before its newness has worn off. Every detail and feature counts. They do best work always and stand every strain for years. They are made in all styles and sizes, for small farms and large, low and high ma chines, frames of braced and trussed steel. Uphill or down, or on the level, the apron drive assures even spreading, and the covering of corners is assured by rear axle differentials. In all styles the rear axle is placed so that it carries near three-fourths of the load. This, with the wide-rimmed wheels with Z-shapci lugs, makes for plenty of tractive power. Winding of the beater is prevented by largo diameter and the beater teeth are long, strong and chisel pointed. The I II C spreader lines will interest yon. See them at the local dealer's. Get catalogues from him, or write us. International Harvester Company of America (Incorporator Portland A GREAT Combination Offer The Journal management has maJe arrangements with llie Portland Evening Telegram whereby we can give sub scribers the advantage o! a gigantic combination oiler lor a limited period. You can get a metropolitan evening paper with all llie latest news from all over the world and the news of Crook County at a remarkably low price. The Evening Telegram is the best paper in the slate, market reports unexcelled, Saturday edition contains a magazine and comic section in colors. The Crook County Journal is the county official paper ol Crook County. The Portland Evening Telegram, per year $ 5.00 The Crook County Journal, per year 1.50 Total .$ 6.50 Both papers through A m ! this office if paid in xvi J advance for one year til ilet-rvf on or before December 31, 1913 -o of Farm Tasks ot the great heaps of manure piling up constantly in barn yards, stables, and stalls, is a gloomy one. Those piles mean much disagreeable and Ore. .Stitniiioiia In the rlrrult court ot the tut tit Oregon l"r Crook county. J. II. Iliiuer, plaintiff, v. Nullum I'rlnr, John I'rlni', trunk II. Prims Hiiriili Power. I . N. Prlne, i'nul llhuil.n, Nornli Itliixlca, An. lictte Khodr. Horthii Mimic, Will luce Mimic, mid nil unknown heir ol I'nvhl Prlne, tli-ecnecd, II, I', Alli'ii, II. K. A I Ifii no Milinlnl. Iriitur ( tl"' clt l William I iwti r, dccciiMcd, Annie Muling, i-xecuirli ul tin- ctnle ol ( C. Mill ing, dcccliacd, Mllll Mil IlllkllllWU lu-lr ol C. C. Muling, decenwd, nml nil other Interested, dcfcml it n fx. To Wllllnm I'rlni'. John I'rlni', l-'rnnk It. 1'rliit', Sitrnli Power, V, H. I'rlni-, l'ul UIiiiiIik, Noruli Miodi-, Annette KIiihIiw. IhTlllit Khuilc, Wallace llhodee. nml nil mikutwii heir ol Itavlil Prints ilecened, II. K. Allen, II. I'. Allot it iiilmlnl t ru l r ol tin- catnte ol Wllllnm l'(wlir, iIivvhwiI, Annie Milium, executrix ol thr catute ol C. C. Muling, iIivi'IohmI, nii1 nil (III known lii-Ira ol I'. C. Muling, " leaned, nml to nil other Interested, tin nliovv niiint'il ili'fi'tiilitnta: In tlit nmnti ol the tnte ol Ore iron, Yon nml enrli ol you nri here. Iiy rfitilnd It) iii'iwir nml nmiwi-r the iMiniilnlnt ol idulutlft ftli'tl again! you In the nhov entitled nlt nml t'onrt within ten tiny Iroiu t III- OllllMll tlll service of till ioiiii. iiuiiih iimii .von, It wrvinl In Crook county, tnle ol irvgon, or II erred within itny othi'r i-omity lu till tnt, then within twenty dnyi Irom the date of the crvlf ol thl liitl iniiiia liion you, or II served Iiy (Mill. Ih-ntlon tin iruvltli' hy law, turn oil or U'loru tho 29tk U, f NW, 1(13, nml you nml cncli ot you nrv hrrrliy notllli'il Hint II you (nil to nmwnr nml nnitwir, lor witnt thi'iWl, tlm plaintiff will tnkti n tUx-nw ol nhl rourt ngiilimt you tor tlm rrhrt priiywl for In tint romiilitliit, to-wlt: Kor n iltvnw ol thU court tothffl lift Unit tln plaintiff, J. II. Hitni'r, In tlm nwiiiT In It ImpUs tri from nil liit'liuihriini't', ol lot tiuiiilH'r olir In block iiiiiiiIht (our ot the city ol rrlni'vllli-, Crook comity, tnto ol Orriton, lUTonllnir to Monroe IIihIkm' pint ol km I it city now on rilo nml ol rcconl In tho office ol the county clerk ol Crook county, tnt ol Oregon. Hint the oYlYmlnnt anil ench mid nil ol them lie lorrvrr linrrvtl nml ratoppvtl Irom Imvlim or clnlruliiK nny rlitht, title or Intermt In or to Mtlil iirtiiilM, nml Unit the pliilntlft' title thereto he lorever iUlt'teil, ronllrmeil nmi eatnhllnheil In hluiMcll, hi helm nml amluna. That nil record liiruintirnnrra, lien nml cloud HKlnt plnlntlff' title to mild prvtulw. rxttlnjr prior to the 2nd dny ol June, 19(0, lie decreed nml i-oiu limlvi'ly held mid considered to lie canceled, ntUttled and removed, and that all prraoim claiming title or any Interest lu or to nld prrni le, or nny inrt thereol, Iiy or through the delemlnnta or either ol them, lie lorever linrred and etopied Irom bnvliiK or cliilmlnu any Inter, pet therein, nml tor inch other nml further relief n mny eem meet to the rourt and Jut In the prvinlwu. Till iiinuioii l ililillhcd In the Crook County Journitl lor lx lull week In aeven ronecutlre Immhw of nlil pitMr, coiniuciif Itiir with the iHHiie ol IH'totier Kllli. lUKl, nml end liiK with the luu of Noveiiilier 27lh, l'.HX dy order ot the Hon. (i. Springer, county JiiiIk of Crook county, Mali! of Oregon, iiui le nml entered on the llthtliiyof Ik'tolier, 11113. tinted nml pnlillHhed flrnt time October ltith, lUi:i. M. K. Hiiimk, Attorney for plnlntlff. 8ummont In llie I'lriMill Court alloc SUUofOr Hon fur Crouk count v. MUl Klllult, I'ltintiir, ru. Kreil A. Mi Duwell mnl I.h,h Mclliiwrll, ilrfriiilniitii. To Ijhiii Mi l)owfll,clffi'nilnt! In the iinnie of the huu uf (ireiion, you urn hereby rpiii!red to p'r and amwer lha complaint lllfl aKulim, you lu th aluiYc rntltli'il ,iilt aril bin ti wwhaof the lute of lha llrnt pulilieatlon of thla uin niuiia, which ilate of llrM nuhliiniUm la thewli day uf lictolier, llii:i, and if you fail to to ainwer, for want thereof, tlm plalntiir will apply to the rourt fur the re. Ilef demandi'd in ld ruiiipUint. to-wlt: fur a piilmnmit aipiinat Krcl A. Mi l !( I'll fur tlutVUM with interest thereon at Ihe rate uf ten per rent per annum from tha 'Jml day ol Oi-tober. IMS. fur luO atUir iiey'n fii' and hir tlm rot and dmhurae. nienta of thin milt. For a ili i riw ol the ahoYe entitled cniirt that the follnwliiir deacnlied laud, to-wil: the aouth half uf the mirth wt quarter ami Iota three nml lour uf Hurtlon four in township thirteen oulh of ranife thirteen eat of Willamette Meridian in Crouk county. Ore he nuld hy the nhnrlll'nf thia county arairdinn to law and tliut lha prueeeil m iipplii to the payment of lUiiitiH' miiil juilitnient and I he coma and chaiKeN of mukiiiji mild mile. 'Mint llie ile ffiiilanta anil all perMum chiiiiiiuK umler them or either of them lie foreYcr harred and funclo-ed uf ul I riht, title, Interest or equity of redemption in aaid pieuiiaea or nny pait thereof, ThiaaiiiHiiionaia puhllnhed hy order of the llunorahle (I. .sprinuer, county judu of Crook county, (ireitou, made nnd en tered on the Uiui da of lictolier, 1IM.1. M. It. KU.Iorr. Attorney for l'lnlntih". Notice for Publication Department of the Interior U. 8. Land Ofllce at The Dalle. Ore. I September Hi, 11)13. Notice in hereby jriven that KUvd'S. Krlckaon ol I'rinevillu, Oregon, who on June 3, HMO, inaile Iminuntentl No, OtilllS, for lot a, net iiwj, n,4 el, gection 30, towiidhip HI, ninth, range 16 east, Wil lamette Meridian, Iihi llloil notice of intention to make final three-year proof ta eatHbliph claim to the land above described before Timothy K. J. Duffy, U. H. CoinmiHNloner at bin office in I'rineville, Oregon, on the 3rd day of November, 11113. Claimant nainiu an witnemeu Jnmea A. Mollltt, Jacob Hocker, (ilenn lien drickaon, John Hopper, all ol I'rine viile, Oregon. H. Fiiank Woodcock, "25 KegiHter. For Sale or Trade Deeert claim 8 iiillen from Trine' vllh.', all fenced, 25 ncres In crop, plenty of witter. Prlci) 81000. Ad- UroHu F,,cure Journal. 10-2