OREGON NEWS NOTES OF GEKERALIHTEREST Events Occurring Throughout the State Curing the Past Week. Plan to Secure Tourist Traffic Portland. Officials of four trans country railroads terminating In the northwest and representatives of commercial organisations in Portland, Seattle, Tacoma and Spokane held a conference here and planned a joint campaign to bring to the northwest as large a share as possible of the influx of eastern tourists expected on the Pacific coast next year. The plan calls for the establishment of a permanent northwestern tourist and travel bureau at Chicago, which will act as a clearing house for all exploitation, publicity and advertising done by each of the northwest cities by each of the roads. Fifty-Cent Pieces Bad. Salem. The police of Salem are looking for a mysterious woman, who has passed numerous counterfeit 60 cent pieces here. " It Is not believed that the bogus money was made in this city or coun ty, but the theory of the police is that the woman Is a confederate of the counterfeiters and was sent here to dispose of as much of the bogus money as possible. All the coins were printed in the same mold and were made by an expert "MiM-FIre" Facts Told. The Dalles. That in one single day he unearthed 20 "miss-fired" holes of dynamite, any one of which, bad the "exploder" been struck, would have resulted in an explosion similar to the one which resulted In the disaster on The Dalles-Celilo canal works, when four were killed and as many Injured, was the testimony of R. S. Morris before the coroner's jury which Is in vestigating the cause of the explosion. MISS HELEN HUNTINGTON BH2EF NEWS OF OREGON Is 4 Miss Helen Huntington, who will wed Vincent Astor, the richest young man In America, April 30. Held on Serious Charge at Condon. Condon. Bert Strickland, who says his home is at Gladstone, Or., was arrested here charged with setting fire to the Oregon hotel, which burned to the ground, causing one death and several serious injuries. He was ar raigned before Justice Hollen and af ter considerable evidence had been given, was bound over to appear be fore the next session of the grand jury. His bond was fixed at J4000. MANY SEEKERS FOR OFFICE Filing Time Ends with 258 Aspirants In the Race. Salem. Petitions and declarations of 25S aspirants for party nominations for state and district offices had been received by Secretary of State Olcott when the time for filing ended. The number sets a new record, and a score cr more of exciting contests are as sured. Of the aspirants 199 are republicans, 44 are democrats and 15 are progres sives. In 1910, 81 republicans and 23 democrats filed, and in 1912, 125 re publicans and 58 democrats filed. The increase in filings is due large ly to an amendment of the primary law passed at the last session of the legislature providing for aspirants for all except county offices to file with the secretary of state. The change has greatly increased the work here and as a result Mr. Olcott has bad day and night forces of clerks at work for more than a week and there still is a large amount of work to be done. Of all the contests, that for gover nor promises to be the most exciting. There are 15 aspirants for party nom inations, a new record, and all are actively engaged in campaign work. Pendleton Man Draws Heavy Fine. Pendleton. John Estes, .proprietor ef a local pool hall, who recently paid a fine of $250 for permitting gambling In his place of business, was fined $500 by Judge Phelps for exhibiting ob scene pictures. He had previously pleaded not guilty to the charge. "Tick" Fever Is Fatal In Baker. Baker. Frank Gooding, 66 years old. died here of unnrtnri n. "MV" fever, the first dparh fmm thin .duds ver recorded hore oix.niini, Baker DhysieianB. Onnril by a wood tick several weeks nira hut ought no medical advice until it wan tOO late to heln him Brief News of the Week Commission form of government plan was defeated at Kansas City. Half of Illinois Is now prohibition, complete returns showing that 22 counties went "dry," giving the prohi bitionists 52 out of 102 counties. Lumbermen closed their mills for one day in honor of the funeral of the late millionaire lumberman, Frederick Weyerhaeuser, and 50 officials from the Duluth district attended the serv-1 ices at Rock Island In a body. The faculty of the university of Cali fornia has voiced a vigorous protest against that portion of the proposed immigration bill which virtually ex cludes Asiatic students from Ameri can universities. It Is reported that Minooka, Grundy county, 111., which has just gone dry, has dispensed with street lights, po lice and city attorney, and the city treasurer must serve without pay. The city finds Itself without funds to carry on the corporation business. It Is said. For fear that they will interfere with the plans of the prohibitionists to secure nation-wide prohibition, the anti-saloon forces of Nebraska have halted their fight in that state for a law preventing saloons from locating two miles from any state institution. The reserve clause In the contracts of "organized" baseball players was held to beinvalld and unenforceable, in a decision handed down by Federal Judge Clarence W. Sessions In deny ing the application of the Chicago Federal league club for an injunction to restrain Catcher William Killifer from playing with the Philadelphia National league club. Co-ordinate development of the greatest possibilities that He In the Columbia and Snake rivers and their tributaries, Is the aim of the Columbia and Snake River Waterways assocla tion, and every phase of this work as It deals with improvement of naviga tion and harnessing of water power were discussed by experts at the fifth annual convention which opened at the Portland commercial club Monday morning. . Mart Without Food a Week. Marshfield. Alone in the mountains seven aays witnoui iooa. u. uiibert. a man Detween tu ana w years or aee. was too wean 10 wain to sarety wnen found in the Eden Ridge country and was carea lor ior iwo aays oeiore ne was aoie to proceea. Flavet to Get Yards and Docks. Astorl-l. Louis W. Hill, president of the (ireat Northern railway com pany, announceu nere uiai me propos ed yards and docks of the Great North ern ana jNorin uhdk comnauieB win be built at Flavel or Tanzy Point." People in the News Count Okuma has accepted the premiership of Japan. Ex-President Taft has gone to Au gusta, Ga., to spend several weeks' vacation. Captain Frank Kelley, leader of the idle army of Los Angeles, Cal., was sentenced to the rockpile for 60 days. King Gustav of Sweden has been successfully operated on for stomach ulcer. The state of Minneesota received $82,528 as the inheritance tax on the estate of the late Charles G. Gates, of Minneapolis. Simon Guggenheim, ex-United States senator from Colorado, has re signed as national republican commit teeman. He has asked to be relieved of his official duties at once. Professor Thomas Preston, of Princeton, has arrived at London with his wife, who was formerly Mrs. Grov- er Cleveland, the couple taking apart ments at a modest hotel in Blooms bury. Mrs. William Howard Taft, wife of the ex-preseident, has become a mem ber of the New Haven anti-woman suffrage association, according to an announcement made by the organiza tion. Testimony has been Introduced at Terre Haute, Ind., to show that Mayor Roberts directed assaults against re publican workers at the polls. The mayor is also implicated In the charge of illegal registration of 18 alleged fictitious names. The white slippers that Miss Elean or Wilson will wear on the occasion of her approaching wedding to Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo, are being made at Lynn, Mass., but the makers refuse to tell what the size of the slippers Is. In the city election at Florence, a now charter was adopted by a 6-to-l , vote. It provides for what Is practt ' cully a commission form of govern ! meiit with a budget for expenses. A fall of 70 feet, one of the highest ' til til A v n r 1 1 1 in Ha litarwt fiii onmmnn. ilnl litiiMWYUtiu will ttltllttiMi Kv ItuvrM j V""a iruv-Hi n III ' UVIIIVt,M JJ Va I V4) v. oiimeon, oi i rairie vuy, ior pmcer mining and development of electricity. One hundred and ntne bottles of beer and 12 bottles of whisky went in- j to the Willamette river, via the Al bany sewer. Police officers poured It out Two months more will be required on preliminary plans and specifica tions before bids can be called on the $100,000 classroom and administration building of the university of Oregon. The fishermen's union at Astoria has asked net 6 cents a pound us the price this year for cannery salmon, and 7 cents for the cold storage variety. The prices are the same as prevailed last season. The board of regents of the Oregon agricultural college approved a plan submitted bv the student bodv which will result in the establishment of a siuuenis- co-operauve Dookstore, wttn a capital of $2500. Forty-one schools out of 70 In Polk county have completed the 14 require ments and are standardized. Com petition was the outcome of the plan, and each school has received a pen nant for Its work. The report of State Treasurer Kay for the quafter ending March 31 shows that there was less money in the treas ury at that time than during any pre ceding quarter for a number of years. The aggregate in all funds was $013,- 397.24. President Wilson wrote to Senator Chamberlain of Oregon Indorsing the proposition to lend a United States army engineer to China to supervise reclamation and conservation work and flood prevention. He praised the Red Cross for conceiving the idea and expressed the hope that congress will approve it Senator Chamberlain reports that the agricultural committee has agreed to the appropriation of $10,000 for the Importation of Corriedale sheep for breeding purposes, $5000 for continua tion of the biological survey in Ore gon, $10,000 for further farm experi mental work in Alaska, and $100,000 for forest protection from fire in co operation with the states. Although the federal forestry bu reau made announcement a few weeks ago that 410,000 acres of land in vari ous 4?irts df central lOrvgon were about to be withdrawn from the forest reserves, it develops upon close analy sis that only 30,000 acres of this entire area will be available for actual settle ment for other than dry fanning purposes. The Oregon bureau of mines' and geology will publish before the end of this year a dozen principal reports besides numerous small ones as the result of investigations made in 1913 and 1914. They will deal with the dis cussion of building stones, coal re sources, clay and clay products, the metal mining Industry, cement ma' terlals and road materials. Farmers in Lane county, who re cently agreed to plant more than 4000 acres to clover, in hopes of renourlsh- ing land which has been exhausted by the continual growing of grain for the past 60 years, are preparing to experiment with the use of lime to aid in the clover growing. The ex periments are being made under the direction of the Lane county farm ex pert. Samples of soil from all parts of Lane county are being analyzed to determine parts of lime needed. State Game Warden C. H. Evans states that the 32 elk, brought from Jackson Hole, Wyo., to the Billy Mea dows pasture in Wallowa county, are to be turned loose to shift for them selves. Sportsmen of Joseph petition ed the state fish and game commis sion to have the elk transferred to the head of Wallowa lake, where they could be seen by tourists, but the board decided that expenditure of about $4000 for the purpose would not be justified. State Bank Superintendent Sargent has notified 75 corporations that they would either have to quit business or comply before June 4 with the law relating to trust companies, which was passed at the last session of the legislature. lie suggested to the com panies having the word "trust" in their names and not doing a trust business that they file supplemental articles of incorporation changing their names. A uniting of Jackson, Klamath and Josephine counties for the exploiting of Crater lake, upper Klamath lake, upper Rogue river, Oregon caves, Ash land butte and other natural scenery in southern Oregon, is the latest "get together" movement started. A meet ing of delegates from the commercial bodies of Ashland, Grants Pass, Klam ath Falls, Talent, Gold Hill, Rogue River and other cities will be held in Meaford the latter part of the month. The meeting has been called by the Medford commercial club. BUICK The Car that Sells by the Train Load 4tM The Buick Car Sets Mark in a Run Twenty and One-Tenth Mile Made on One Gallon of "Gai Twenty and one-tenth mile? on one gallon of gasoline by a tlx-cylnder Ituick car! That's the mark that the Buick Motor Company may advertise to the world as an odlolal performance. Not only did the Baiek "Six" set this remarkable economy mark on January 14, hut the Model B-25, under similar running conditions, made 22 7 miles per jrallon, while a third ma chine, a Model B 37, with no gravity feed tank for the measured gallon of gasoline, made 17.07 miles. The later two models are tours. With F. E. Edward, former American Automobile AiRoeiotion technical upert and one of the most conscientious officials in the industry, in charge of the technical committee and with Darwin Natch, St. Clair Couwns,,, Reed Parker and E. (i. We-tlake to furnish the aflidavit as paecengers in the Buick car, the machines were taken to Thirty-third street and South Park avenue, Chicago, where the attested Warner speedotnetors were set and oflioially recorded by Messrs. Edwards and Hatch, engines were run until they had 6ucked the ganoline leads dry and the technical commitlea carefully supplied ench car with one gallon of ganollne that rated 02 In a temperature 55 degrees Fahrenheit. Soon after the machines reached Jackson Park, where a two-mile circuit at and near the lake shore was utilized for a testing ground, the wind net in off the lake, the roadways became sheeted in ice and the temperature fell to 32 d.groe. The southwest wind, that blew 23 ruilim an hour at the start, shifted off the lake and became raw and cold, offering great resistance to the machines. The Buic "six" weiahed 4550 pounds, with four passengers and equipment, the "25" weighed 3300 pounds and the "37" 3780 pounds, inclu ling four passengers and equipment. The "six" has an engine 3 3 4x5, the "25" has a bore and stroke of 3 3 4 each, while the "37" is 3 3 4x5. The 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. L Huff PRINEV1LLE, OREGON Fredw.Nobie AGENTS FOR CHALMERS AND BUICKS J Statement of Resource anil Liabilities of The First National Bank Of Prineville, Oregon KKHOL'UL'KS Loam mid Diaoonnt.., tSH,s:(5 03 Cnltttl HUUn Bondi 12,V no Bank inimlaMMte 12.VI0 13 C'sab A Due from ba Dki 210.W4 Oi 1 B. F. Allan. PraalcW WiU Wur.w.il.r, Vie Pri.W.nl LIAIIIMTIKS capital HUxtk,lld In 1 60,000 00 Hurpltii fund, arti'jit 5,0"0 00 Undivided proilu, tamed m,T2 M Circulation S.U0 00 Uepo.ll m,m S3 SMl,tt4 It T. M. B.WwIa. CuhUr H. BaMtria, Am'I CuhUt International Harvester Oil Tractors The IHC Line I TVERY day situations come up in which you need an International Harvester oil tractor Mogul or Titan. Art International tractor on your farm will pull your field machines, haul your products and supplies, furnish the power for thresher, husker and shredder, feed grinder, or serve you in other duties. Simple mechanism, protection of parts, ease and convenience of operation, economy of fuel, complete equipment make Inter national tractors last and satisfy you longest. Study their records, ask their owners about them, and write us fur catalogues. IMC tractor sizes rane from 6-12 to 30-60 li. I', operating ou kerosene aud gasoline. A line from you will bring yon catalogues, facts and figures, and we will also tell you where the tractors may be seen. Address the Uocorporated) f CUm AND HAT MACHINES Bindm, Knpmi HMdtn, Mowwt IUIm, Siiclura tttj Loioin Hay PrMMt CORN MACHINES rltaton, Pickcra BiBam, Coltiutora Euiliff Citttra Sbatian, Sbreddtr TILLAGE t af, SpriBK-Tevtk, ana Dtak Harrowa Calllnlofi GENERAL LINE OU aa Gaa Eafiaa OilTnatora Maaar Spraaoara Craan Saparaiara Para W.rona -Motor Track Taratbara Grala Drtlb Fta Crnidan Kaifa Griaaarf Biaoarltria Portland Champion Oeeriiig McCormlck Rwauta Ore. Oilorn flano Portland, Oregon, 4 2-8 You Would Enjoy the Journal Hotice oi Mivrift'e .Sale. Hy virtue of an execution and order of a!o duly itmued by the clerk of the circuit court of the county of Crook, otate of Orepon, duU(t the 27th day of March, 1U1 1, in a certain action in the circuit qourt for said county and utale, wherein the Uend Company, a corporation, as plaintiff and judg ment creditors, recovered judgment agiunFt . I and A. A, Cooper, purtnern, doing butdnt'a a the Terrebonne Lumber Co., for the Bum of Seven 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 cost and diKburnemenU. Notice in hereby given that I will ON THE 2J DAY OF MAT, 1914, at the front door of the court house in Prineville, in aid county, at 'I o'clock in the afternoon of tiaid day, Bell at public auction to the highest bidder, for CBtdi.the follow ing doHcribed property, to-wit: Lots finlit (8) and nine (0), in block one hundred and twenty-four (124), Jlillinan, Crook county, Oregon. Taken and levied upon an the property of the mid 0. C. and N. A. Cooper, partner, doing buHinenn under the firm name arid stylo of the Terrebonne Lumber Co , or a much thereof iih may be nucoMary to satisfy the naid judg ment in favor of The Mend Com panv, a corporation, ngainut taid Terrebonne Lumber Co. with fnter et thereon, toghtber with till cobib and dinbiirsement8 that have or may accrue;. Khank Ri.kinh, Sheriff. Dated at Prineville, Oregon, April 1,1914. Stock Brands Must Be Renewed by June 3 Owlnur to the foot thiit at the liiHt hphhIoh of the lA'KlMliiture a uhaiiKo wan made In the law for branding llvextoek, I ih'Hlre to lve notice to all KtockiiiKii of Crook countv that. Mik'HH their lirandH aro renewed lie fore J lino 3, 1914, nald lirandn will lm cancelled. To renew theno lirandu I nave adopted the plan of recording the iirand in tlie name wav that Ifc wn first recorded. Is.y dolmr UiIh It will lie neccHHary to (lie a leather with the Iirand burned noon the Maine, together with the application fur recording the brand. The fee for recording it 50 eentH. Application! may bo received by writing to thlH olllco. It will not be neccMHiiry to renew brandH that wore recorded at thlH office uftur June 1, l'.U.'l, 1-U-iSC W AHHUN Biiown, Couuty clerk.