r T OREGON HEWS NOTES OF GEN ERAUNTEREST Events Occurring Throughout the State During the Past Week. "Fir Finder" Will Be Used In Baker. Baker. New methods of protection from forest fire damage planned by the Baker County Forest Fire Protec tive association for the coming year include two "fire finders." The "fire finder" is a new device to this sec tion. It will locate a forest fire within radius of approximately 30 miles. An assessment of 1 per cent per acre on all the land represented by the mem bership will provide a fund of over $2000 tor this purpose. 1 Boy in a "Brigand's" Cave. Roseburg. "Don't you go near there If you don't want a bullet shot Into you," Wllford Simmons, age 10, told Constable Singleton when the officer expressed his Intention to search a cave near Cottage Grove which young Simmons confessed be and some other boys had fitted up like the home of a brigand, and which, he said, was guarded continually by an armed sen tinel. State Water Law Hit By Court La Grande. State laws governing the state water board Insofar as it declares that the board has power to make water appurtenant to certain property, that is, water assigned to a specified tract of land for irrigation, be used perpetually on that tract and no other, have been declared uncon stitutional by Circuit Judge Knowles. BRIEF NEWS OF OREGON With an average cash reserve of 15 per cent, the bank of Oregon.how a very healthy condition. Pendleton may enter a balloon in the national balloon race to be started In Portland during the rose festival. The Salem chautauqua, which was a feature during the cherry fair at that place last year, will be given again this year on a larger scale than before. Governor West has been asked to appoint delegates to the American Academy of Political and Social Serv ice convention, which will be held In Philadelphia. The railroad commission has sent notice to the Newberg Telephone com pany that It will hold an Inquiry Into Its rates In Newberg April 10 at 11 a, m. ' Mrs. Edith Hill Booker, state pres ident of the Woman's Christian Tem perance Union, died at Portland fol lowing a week's illness from an afflic tion of the heart Sixteen hundred pounds of potatoes went through Albany by parcel post They had been shipped from Lyons, CHARLES N. BURKE Iff 1 U ;i ' J Charles N. Burke, South Dakota congressman, who defeated Senator Crawford for the republican primary Child is Deserted. St Helens. Called to a deserted barn near West St Helens on Tues day morning, March 17, where Gus Hegele had found a child evidently in tentionally deserted by its parents. Deputy Sheriff Lake kept the matter secret till last Friday, saying he had a clew he wished to run down. Wife-Murder Charge Preferred. Eugene. Charged with causing the death of his wife by poison, Andrew H. BoBsen, of Springfield Junction, was arrested on the county road as be was bringing his mother-in-law and her daughter to Eugene, and he was lodged in jail without bonds. EDUCATE TO PLAY GAMES Pamphlet Prepared by Superintendent Churchill to Go to All Schools. Salem. Play and education, equip ment types of school buildings, games of various kinds, festivals and special days, athletic meets and athletic badge tests, field meets and other forms of exercise are topics discuss ed in a pamphlet which Superintend ent Churchill is distributing among the schools of the state. Mr. Chur chill's Idea Is to teach the children how to play wholesome games and have recesses devoted to such instead of leaving the children standing about basements and schoolgrounds, when they should be getting needed exercise. It has been found that in many cbools the children do not know how to play wholesome games that were played years ego and that many of the teachers do not remember them well enough to teach them. This bul letin gives a large list of games suit able for the various grades, carefully classified, with full directions how to play each game. Delegates Are Invited. Salem. Governor West has been asked to appoint delegates for Oregon to the second national conference on marketing and farm credits to be held in Chicago beginning April 14. Mar kets and credits in the various states will be discussed with the object of bettering conditions. Persons desir ing to be appointed delegates to the conference are invited to communicate with the governor. Fight on Scab Promised. Hood River. Professor H. S. Jack son, of the Oregon agricultural col lege, has procured the services of Pro fessor L. F. Henderson, formerly head of the department of botany of the university of Idaho, at Moscow, in conducting experiments with the scab problem that Is confronting the grow ers of the Hood River valley. Milton Votes Bonds, Milton. The proposition to bond the city for $18,000 for the extension of the Intake of the water system, tc give pure city water, and for the de velopment of the electric system foi supplying power for irrigation of or chard tracts outside the city limits, was carried at the special election, the vote being 120 to E6. Slayer Gets Prison Term. Corvallis. Gust Mamanus, found guilty of manslaughter, was sentenced to serve from one to 15 years in the Oregon state prison. it. . AO H.llna ! on mo vorni. c cuaveru. nomination for United State senator, east of Albany, to Fort Kock, in soutn ern Oregon. The potatoes were In 43 pound sacks. ' Correspondence received at the ad ministration office of the Oregon nor mal school Indicates that a large num ber of teachers, experienced and Inex perienced In the state, will be on band for the short course, which will begin Monday, April 6. The forestry building of the Lewis & Clark exposition of 1905 is doomed to total destruction within a couplt of years. Dark beetles and lungus growths have made such progress that the building is almost unsafe for oc cupation now, It is said. The first school In Coos county to reach the required 96 credits to make it a 'standard A" school, under the requirements of a plan recently for mulated by County Superintendent Baker, is the school at Bridge, Dis trict No. 77, which has an enrollment of 60 pupils. Alleging that the Rose City Import-' Ing Company, of Portland, has violat ed the liquor laws of the state by ship ping liquor Into "dry" territory with out labeling it properly. Governor West has asked Attorney-General Crawford to bring suit to have the charter of the company revoked. That cougars and wildcats are be coming much less numerous in the Cascade mountains adjacent to Eu gene, and that there is a noticeable increase In the number of deer as a consequence, is the statement of George Moody, a young hunter and trapper of McKenzie bridge. Two important days for Oregon at the Panama-Pacific exposition next year were decided on by the execu tive committee of the Willamette Val ley Exposition association In session at Salem. The first Is July 15, 1915, which will be cherry day, and the sec ond is October 15, which will be apple day. Governor West has prepared an amendment to the constitution for In itiation at the coming election em powering the executive to remove Dis trict attorneys, sheriffs and consta bles and to appoint their successors. The measure would give the governor virtual control of law enforcement of the state. The class rush has passed Into his tory at the Oregon normal school. Hereafter Instead of an open-handed fight for supremacy the classes will have their days when programmes will be presented and athletio contests carried out. By mutual agreement the flag of the class which is performing will fly unmolested. Thomas B. Kay, state treasurer, has just given notice that there are funds in the state treasury with which to redeem outstanding state warrants drawn on the general fund and en dorsed "Presented and not paid for want of funds" prior to and including November 19, 1913. The warrants will now be honored at Mr. Kay's office and interest on them will cease after March 30. Given a man 97 years old, a birth day cake glowing with 97 candles, t stereopticon showing pictures of the days when Oregon was young and the man was much younger, and a chapel full of the friends of auld lang syne, and you have a few of the "high lights" of a remarkable birthday party that was given at the Taylor-Street Methodist Episcopal church at Port land in honor of Rev. John J. ("Father") Flinn, pioneer Methodist pastor of Oregon. Measures seeking to abolish the rur al school districts of the state, to place those schools on the same basis as those of the cities, and to be super vised by a central county board with a school superintendent at the head, will be Introduced at the next sesolon of the legislature by the Oregon Civic league. In addition there are now being drafted, he says, measures aim ed to revise the school laws of the state, which are characterized as ar chaic, and to abolish the property qualification for school election voting. Brief News of the Week Forty-one blooded horses In the gov ernment stables at Fort Riley, Kas., were burned to death In a fire that destroyed the barns. Fire which caused a loss of 1150,000 was caused In the business section of Esthervllle, Iowa, when a lantern ex ploded In a livery barn. Four hundred buildings. Including the leading hotel and two department stores, were flooded as a result of Town Creek overflowing Its banks at Jackson, Miss. The first shipment of fruit from New Zealand ever received, on the Pa cific coast has been put on sale at San Francisco, The consignment con sisted of pears and peaches. Heavy rains and melting snow throughout New York and Ohio caus ed fear of a repetition of last spring's disastrous floods. The Southern Pacific railroad shows a decrease In gross earnings of more than $3,000,000 for the past elglt months, according to a statement Is sued at San Francisco. The Massachusetts legislature has voted for the first time In Its history In favor of referring to the petition the question of granting suffrage to women. Differences between the California dry campaign and the anti-saloon league have been settled and petitions will be circulated asking that the peo ple declare for prohibition to become effective after February 15. 1916. The estate of the late Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy, founder of the Christian Science church, has been settled, the sum of $2,590,632 being delivered to the trustees of the church by the ad ministrator. Competition In the telephone busi ness of the Pacific northwest is arbi trarily ordered restored, and govern ment regulation of such business Is insured, by a decree entered In United States district court by Judge Robert S. Bean. The defendants, the Ameri can Telephone & Telegraph company and Its subsidiary companies, In the suit, brought under the Sherman anti trust law, are perpetually enjoined from creating a condition that will In terfere with competition. BUICK The Car that Sella by the Train Load The Buick Car Sets Mark in a Run Twenty and One-Tenth Mile Made on One Gallon of "Ga" Twenty and one-tenth miles on one gallon of gasoline by a six-cylnder lluiek carl That's the mark that the Buick Motor Company may advertise to the world a an official performance. Not only did the liaick "Six" set this remarkable economy mark on January 14, but the Model B-25, under similar running conditions, made 22.7 miles wr gallon, while a third ma ohine, a Model B-37, with no gravity feed tank for the measured gallon of gasoline, made 17.07 miles. The later two models are (ours. With F. K. Edwards, former American Automobile Aisocistion technical expert and one of the most conscientious officials in the Industry, in charge of the technical committee and with Darwin Hatch, St. Clair Couen, Reed Parker and K. (1. Westlake to furnish the aflidavlU as passengers in the Buick cars, the machines were taken to Thirty-third street and South Park avenue, Chicago, where the attested Warner speedometers were set and officially recorded by Messrs. Edwards and Hatch, engine were run until they had sucked the gasoline leads dry and the technical committea carefully supplied each car with one gallon of ganoline that rated (12 in a temperature 65 degrees Fahrenheit. Soon after the machines reached Jackson Park, where a two-mile circuit at and near the lake shore was utilized for a teiting ground, the wind set in off the lake, the roadways became sheeted in ice and the temperature fell to 32 degres. The southwest wind, mat niew y..j roues an nour i the start, shifted off the lake and became raw ana com, oncrmg great resistance i m hiwuh . The Buic "six" weighed 4550 pounds, with lour paoeengers and equipment, Uie -sj weigneu 3300 pounds and the "37" 3780 pounds, mclu ling lour passengers ana equipment, i n m an enaine 3 3 4x5. the "25" ha a bore and stroke of 3 3 4 each, while the "37" i 3 3-4x5. 1 be gear ratio of the "six" is 3 3 4 to 1, while the others have a 4-to-l gear ratio, HUFF-NOBLE AUTO CO. o.LHuff PR1NEV1LLE, OREGON Fndw.NoM. AGENTS FOR CHALMERS AND BUICKS Statement of Resources and Liabilities of The First National Bank Of Prineville, Oregon KKSOl !1('KH Loam and PlKoonnU... fMXm Uullfil Stat" Bond! HW00 on Bunk r n-iule,oto W.M0 I Cwib A Due from banka 2IO.V" B. F. AIUb, PreaUaiit Will Wunw.iUf. Vic. Pr..ldon l.UIIII.ITIKi capital HUwk. paid In I W.onQ 00 Hurplua lund, ru?l 6".0I0 00 Undivided pronta. earned S7.TJ4 M C-tnulallon Mn 00 Uepoatla SW1.DW M T. M. Baldola. Caahlar H. Baldwla. Aw'l Cufalu People in the News Frederick Weyerhaeuser, the aged millionaire lumberman, Is HI at his home in Pasadena, Cal. Governor Eberhart, of Minnesota, announces that he will be a candidate for re-election on the republican ticket at the primaries in June. Evangelist "Billy" Sunday Is now a grandpa, a seven-pound baby boy hav ing arrived at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Sunday, of Tacoma. Queen Eleanor of Bulgaria will start on her trip to the United States May 21. She will be the first reigning monarch to visit America. A new name, "Muy Slmpatlco," meaning "very sympathetic," has been applied to Colonel Roosevelt by the natives of South America. Joe Choynskl, former prize fighter, received a bequest of $10,000 from Jim Pon, a wealthy Chinese, whom he had befriended many years ago, and who has just died at Chicago. It took a jury an hour to find Frank Tannenbaum, leader of the I. W. W. crowd that invaded New York churches, guilty of participating In an unlawful assemblage. He was sen tenced to one year in the penitentiary and a fine of $500. Joseph Angelo, organizer for the in ternationals, of the United Mine Work ers of America, waa sentenced to four years In prison at Vancouver, B, C, for his part in the Nanaimo riots. Alfred Farlow, after 26 years of ac tive service In connection with Chris tian Science organization, half of which time he has been manager of the committee on publications, has re tired from active work on the commit tee of his own accord and will now be active In other lines of Christian Science work. International Harvester Oil Tractors til"--!. iv.J awJtm...-ij The!HCLtn CXAIN AND HAT MACHINES Blaeari, Unpan IUk. Sudura hr Lars CORN MACHINES Pluto, f icktra BiuUn. C.Wr.ura Eaiuaa CstMra SMbn, Saraadm T1LLAC r, riM-TMtl. aalDWk thrrawa CalimUr, aNERAL LINE Oil u Cu Em im Oil Trutm Meier Sartaetffl Ctmm Ssaaratorl Sum Wifou ltar Tracks Tkrafktn , Grata DrilU fni Ciiaatra Kail Crinetrl BiadarTwiae INTERNATIONAL Harvester oil tractors rank first as machines for all-around farm use. Enumerate a dozen of your farm operations and you will find these tractors Mogul or Titan can be used with profit in all. Tbey furnish reliable power for all belt machines and for disking, plowing and other drawbar work. Features which make I ll C tractors valuable are the track design, the large maiushaft and its long bear ings, the power starting system, the dust proof engine features of proved value which you find on all 1 H C tractors. I H C tractors, Mogul or Titan, are simple, strong, and easily operated. They are built in all sires, 6-12 to 30-60-H. P., and iu Btyles to meet the needs of every good sized farm. The I II C line also includes various styles of general purpose engines from 1 to 50-H. P., operating on high and low grade fuel oils. Write us for catalogues and other iuformation about tractors and engiues. Intern l?ftTini HnnrMtpr rnmnanvfif AmMir.i (Incorporated) JW-1 fi' Portland Ore. Champios Dearing McCormick Milwnkes OlWue Plus Notice l Mivrirt's .Sale. By virtue of an execution and order of snle duly innued by the clerk of the circuit court of the county of Crook, stuto of OreRon, dated the 27th dsy of March, 14)14, in a certain action in the circuit court for said county. snd state, wherein the lScnd Company, a corporation, as plaintiff and judg ment creditors, recovered judgment HgAimt ti. C and N. A. Cooper, partners, doing bunim-ni as the Terrebonne Lumber Co., for the sura of Beven Hundred Nineteen and 20-100 dollars together with interest thereon at the rate of 10 per cent per annum from the 27th day of April, 1912, until paid, and for costs and disbursements. Notice is hereby given that I will ON THE 2a DAT OF MAT, 19H, at the front door of the court houoe in 1'rineville, in said county, at 'I o'clock in the afternoon of said day, sell at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, the follow ing described property, to-wit: Lots eight (8) and nine (9), in block one hundred and twenty-four (124), llillman, Crook county, 'Oregon. Taken snd levied upon as the property of the mid (i. C. and N. A. Cooper, partners, doing businens under the firm name and stylo of the Terrebonne Lumber Co., or as much thereof oh may be necessary to satisfy the said judg ment in favor of The Bend Com panv, a corporation, againnt said Terrebonne Lumber Co. with Inter est thereon, toghthor with all costs and disbursements that have or may accrue. Frank Kuunh, Sheriff. Dated at Prineville, Oregon, April 1, 1914. t rn- Portland, Oregon, 4-2-8 You Would Enjoy the Journal Notice for Publication Department of the Interior, U. 8. Land Olllee at The Dalles, Or. March 2nd, 11(14. Notice Is hereby Riven that TliomuH N. Itlrkman of Held. Oregon, who, on March 21st, 1!H0, mudn HoincMteuil Entry No. OUL'GH for swj sei, v nwl, anil swj hw section 2 anil on December 3lMt, 1910, made additional Home Htend Kntry No. 078!U for nwj swi, swi nwl and lot 4, section 2 and lot 1, Hcctlon 1), township lit Hoiitli, niriKH P.I eiiHt, Willamette Meridian, lias died notice of Intention to niaku Final three year proof to establish claim to tlio land above described, before A. S. Fokk, U. S. Commln slonei', at Hampton, On'ROii, oil the 10th day of April. Jlll l. Claimant names as witnesses: Paul Meld, Floyd Houston, John Holland, Sliellle Holland, all of Held, Oregon. 11. Frank Woodcock, 3-5p Iteglstcr.