OREGON NEWS NOTES OF GENERAUNTEREST Events Occurring Throughout the State During the Past i Week. r Find Father After 25 Year. Pendleton. For 25 years Floyd S. Kerslake lived as Floyd Griffith, un der which nam he married Hattle J. Taylor, a Pendleton girl. He learned 10 days ago that h! mother took him when a baby from his father, a wealthy farmer near Salem, Ore., and gave him the name of his step-father. Recent communication between father and son established the identity of the latter. The Kerslakes have gone to Salem to meet the father of the bride groom at the latter's request 0 Elk Farm Is Proposed. Hermiston. An elk farm Is about to be established at Hermiston. J. R Baley, a young attorney of Pendleton and first president of the Roundup, who owns 160 acres in alfalfa adjoin ing Hermiston, is negotiating with the government for a band of elk cows and one bull to be shipped from Wy oming to Sumner. Mr. Raley proposes to raise elk meat for the market Un der the law the original herd cannot be sold for meat but the increase lrom a domestic herd may be used. Craft on Spit, 8 Aboard. Gold Beach. The gasoline schooner Randolph, with a crew of four, went ashore on the north spit of Rogue river. The lifesaving crew from Ban ion arrived, but was unable to give asslstane. The Randolph has a full cargo of cannery supplies for the Wedderburn Trading company, which may be saved. Captain John Anderson is in command of the vessel. Mine Planters Drowned. Fort Stevens. A launch loaded with Mine planting equipment and manned ty five soldiers was swamped at the mouth of the Columbia river. Corpor al Klempe and Private Price of the Thirty-fourth company, coast artillery, were drowned. The other occupants were hauled from the water by the crew of a yawl which rushed to the rescue. Heavy weather caused the accident. SENOR JOSE ROJAS Road Decision Postponed. Salem. Just where to spend the $175,000 remaining of the state high way fund was a problem discussed by the state highway commission. The riginal fund for the year was about $238,000. NORMAL TO OPEN JUNE 22 Special Courses are Prepared for Teachers of State. Monmouth. The largest attendance tn its history and an Interest in the nodern methods for instruction, un paralleled in years, are the prospects for the 1914 summer session of the Oregon Normal school, announced by President J. H. Ackerman. The sum mer term will open on June 22 and close July 31. Provisions have been made to meet the requirements of four classes of students those who have had experi ence in teaching and who wish to en large their professional or academic knowledge, those who are preparing to teach in the schools that follow the state course of study, those who wish special methods in grades from the first to the eighth, inclusive, and those who wish to take regular nor mal work with a view to graduation from the Oregon Normal school, lead ing to a state certificate without ex . amination. w' Good Crop Outlook. Portland. Reports from various sections of the state indicate that the grain crop of 1914 w'ill be the largest in the history of the state. Not only is there a largely Increased area in agriculture but, because of unusually tavorable conditions, a larger than nor mal yield to the acre is looked for is most districts. Thought It Was Medicine Poison. Albany. According to physicians, Mrs. Lulu Hornback, wife of Ernest Hornback, a local restaurant man, took a dose of sulphuric acid and po tash solution in mistake for medicine. She died of corrosive poisoning, after suffering several hours. Motor Car Returns Grow. ' Salem. Secretary of State Olcott announces that $7511 was received in April as fees for motor vehicle regis trations, dealers and chauffeurs' li censes, as against $5450 in April last year. Woodmen Select Pendleton. Pendleton. Pendleton has been se lected as the place for the next East ern Oregon district convention of the Woodmen of the World, which will be held May 22. I. I. Boak, head consul f the order, is to come from Denver to attend the sessions. iff i i Senor Jose Rojas, Huerta's Minister of Foreign Affairs, whose resignation It is believed indicates opposition to the Dictator's policy. Brief News of the Week It was announced that Colonel Roosevelt would sail from Para, Braiil on the steamship Alden for New York May 17. The Duke of Argyll, son-in-law of the late Queen Victoria and former Governor General of Canada, Is dead. Major General Daniel E. Sickles, now $9 years old, is seriously ill at his home in New York. A hospital for the special treatment of cancer patients will be established in New York. An ample supply of radium will be provided, it is said. A fund of $1,000,000 is already on hand. Detective W. J. Burns was attacked at Marietta, Qa., by a man because of the sleuth's activity In the murder case of Leo Frank, sentenced for the murder of Mary Phagan. The sleuth was hit in the face, but he escaped in a hotel. Great relief was felt at the news from Manila that the Pacific Mail steamer Siberia, reported by wireless to have been in great peril off the coast of Formosa, arrived safe at Man ila. Delegations of women from every part of the country are to engage in a mammoth demonstration in Wash ington on Saturday for the purpose of calling the attention of congress to the demands of the American women for the right to vote. The leading fea ture of the demonstration will be a great parade from the White House to the capitol. THE MEXICAN EMBR0GLI0 Charge d'Affaires O'Shaughnessy and family arrived in Galveston on the tender Yankton. War department has ordered that Spanish-American war veterans who wish to go to the front will have to enlist with the state militia. The practice of "sniping" in Vera Cruz has ceased, and the people are gradually returning to their normal occupations. Aeroplanes performed valuable serv ice in doing scout duty at Vera Cruz. The American blrdmen ascertained the location of the Mexican outposts. One of the flights was made at night The United States navy, It Is said, now has its full complement of 51,500 men, as result of the enlistments since the trouble between the United States and Mexico started. Rebel Commanders Carranza and Villa agreed to remain spectators of the trouble between the United States and Huerta, president of the de facto government in Mexico. Announcement that Foreign Minis ter Rojas has resigned from President Huerta's cabinet was taken as con firmation of reports that formidable opposition to the dictator is develop ing in Mexico City. In accordance with Secretary of War Garrison's order, General Funston Is in absolute charge here. Civil Gover nor Kerr and the other civil authori ties have retired. The Mexican city council suggested the prohibition of bull fights and the signing of an order to that effect was Kerr's last official act. Fanners surrounding Vera Cruz have asked Funston to extend his lines as they have found the Ameri cans excellent customers for their pro ducts and want to continue supplying them but are harassed by "snipers" except within the zone under Ameri can control. Admiral Fletcher made a personal inspection of the fortress of San Juan De Ulna at Vera Cruz. The horrors he found rivaled those of the dark ages. There were 116 prisoners liv ing In indlscribable filth and under conditions of the most awful degrada tion. Mny were barely alive. Others were in caverns under the sea. Rats were everywhere. The admiral or dered the place thououghly cleaned and all the prisoners transferred to light cells. BRIEF NEWS OF OREGON Carranza Will Not Cease Hostilities. 1 El Paso, Tex. General Carranza has formally declined the suggestion of the mediators that he cease hos tilities against Huerta pending the outcome of the plan of mediation. His note, sent to Washington, was made public here. Gtis Johnson, of Mnrshfleld, w sentence ; to an Indefinite term In the peiiut'iitlfiry for receiving money from a man when h knew that the coin had boon stolon. Stanley Henderson, locomotive en gineer for Perham & Uldler was pin ned under the engine and severely scalded, when the engine turned over while at work at North Bend. The registration In Marlon county totals 13,000. The enrollment at Sa lem was Bwelled by women from 2630 to 5067. The totals for the county ex ceed by 800 the original estimates. Rufus Mallory, who was elected In lSt6 to the national house of represen tatives, died at Portland at the age of 82 years. He was twice appointed United States district attorney for Oregon. Charles W. TUldball of the Good Samaritan hospital, Portland, Ore,, was among those rewarded with bronze medals for an act of heroism by the Carnegie hero fund commis sion. GUlnetters at the mouth of the Col umbia river reported a good catch on the first day of the salmon fishing season. Some of the boats brought in 400 pounds of fish. Trappers tn Bakers bay are getting ready. Anti-Cigarette Day was observed by a number of the Sunday schools In Portlaud and Multnomah county Sun day. The occasion was the quarterly temperance lesson taught In the Sun day schools. By orders of Colonel C. H. McKIn stry of the United States engineers, the dredger Chinook will be set to dredge a channel 35 feet deep across the bar at the mouth of the Columbia river during the present year. Crops in the vicinity of Monmouth have been benefited by the recent showers, It is reported. The pros pects for wheat, oats, barley and oth er cereals look bright Clover la grow ing rapidly and the increased acreage of barley is doing well. Portland's bank clearings and pos tal receipts for the month of April ex ceed the record of the corresponding month last year. Building permits show a total of about( $800,000, and real estate transfers aggregated $677, 612. Friday, May 8, Is military day In Corvallis. The date of the annual In spection of the Oregon Agricultural College cadets and military depart ment has come to be one of the big city events. In appreciation of the annual military event the city will be decorated with bunting and flags. Originality of performance and unique designing won for the senior class of the Oregon Normal school the silver cup offered by President J. H. Ackerman at the May day exercises at Monmouth. Miss Edna Phillips, queen of the day, made the presenta tion of the cup. Appointment of a dairy inspector to enforce the law requiring dealers to furnish pure milk in Eugene has been requested by dairymen. They offered to pay for the cost of the inspection and suggested that a license be ap plied to prevent them from charging higher prices. The pelt of a seventeen-foot cougar, which was killed by Paul West who lives four miles above Seaside, on the banks of the Necanlcum, was brought Into Seaside. The pelt will be taken to Astoria for bounty of $10. The beast was caught In a trap after It had killed several of West's young stock. In L. G. Martin, under arrest at Dal lar for the alleged attempt to swindle two banks by bad drafts for $32,500, Plnkerton detectives at the Portland agency have made identification of James E. Cox, a man who is charged with swindling St. Paul and Reed City, Mich., banks out of a total of $7500 last May. Under public ownership of the state printing department, the first three months of 1914 show a saving of $1, 805.85 a month, or a total of $5417.54 for the quarter over prices that would have been charged under the old sys tem, according to the quarterly re port of State Printer U. A. Harris, Just submitted to the state printing board. The Corvallis council is considering the Installation of a municipal paving plant. Petitions for 54,000 yards of paving to be laid during the summer have been presented to the council. Figures presented to the council by a paving expert from Seattle were to the effect that the difference between the cost of contract paving and muni cipal paving of the amount of paving petitioned for In Corvallis will be suf ficient to build 2'4 paving plants. Replying to a telegram from Abigail Scott Dunlway, inspired by a luncheon party In honor of Emma Smith Devoe, president of the National Council of Women voters, Senator Chamberlain assures Mrs. Dunlway he will vote and work for the Brlstow bill to give suffrage to women. There's a humor ous feature to this for the Brlstow bill is a copy of a bill Senator Chamber lain introduced at the beginning of the sesKlon, so that Mrs. Dunlway Is earnestly beseeching Senator Cham berlain to stand by his alvn bill. BU1CK The Car that Sella by the Train Load TheBuick 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 ix-vylntlcr Huick curl Thai' the mark that the Huick Motor Company may advertise to the world as an ollieial performance. Not only did the IUick "Six" net this remarkable economy mark on January I I, but the Model B-25, under similar running condition made 22 7 miles per gallon, while t third ma chine, a Model B 37, with no gravity feed lank for the measured gallon of gasoline, mado 17.07 miles. The later two model are fours, With F. K. Edwards, former American Automobile Association technical tspert and one of the most conscientious officials in the industry, in charge of the technical committee and with Darwin Hatch, St. Clair Couzena,,, Reed Parker and K. O. Westlake to furnish the affidavits a passengers in the Duick earn, 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, engines were run until they had sucked the gasoline leads dry and the technical committer carefully supplied each car with one gallon of gasoline that rated (52 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 greund, the wind set in oft the lake, the roadways became sheeted in ice and the temperature full to 32 degrees. The southwest wind, that blew S3 miles an hour at the start, shifted off the' lake and became raw and cold, offering great resistance tn the machines. The Uuic "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 AGENTS FOR CHALMERS AND BU1CKS Fred W. Noble Statement of Reiource and Liabilities of The First National Bank Of Prineville, Oregon KKSOtJtK'KH Loans and IMnoounts... fJlO0S t'nlte.l Htatea Bonds BUS"" W Bunk r rnmln.(.tc H..VW 1 Cub 1'ue fmiu banks 210.9W W -(31.4-24 It B. F. Allan, Praiidant Will Wirmik, Vk. Pr..ld.nt I.IAIIII.niKI capital Htork. paid In I M.0H0 00 Hurplua fund, rarned BO.ono 00 Unrtlvldwl profit, earned S7,T.!4 M Circulation S.8U0 00 Depoalta , Sst.OW M M1,4.M IS t T. M. Baldwin. CaaMa I H. Baldwin. Am'I Caahlar International Harvester Oil Tractors The IHC Line CRAW AND HAT MACHINES Raaara, KMr Haaaara, Mawar! takaa, Stackara Ha? Lc-aaan tUr PrMM CORN MACHINES Maatara, Pirkara Sham, Cullnalari Eanbm Ctrttan Ultra, IMfal TILLAGE Pat, Spriu-Txti, ua Dull Hatrawa Caltlratara GENERAL LIKE Oil aaa Caa Eagiaca Oil Tractor! Maaart Spraaatn Craaai Separator! Fam Waaaa! Motor Track! Thraahara Grata Drilb Faa Grladan Kaifa Griadar Kaaarlwiaa EVERY day situations come up in which you need an International Harvester oil tractor Mogul or Titan. An International tractor on your (arm 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, aisk their owners about them, and write us for catalogues. 1 H C tractor sizes range from 6-12 to 30-60 H. P. operating on kerosene and gasoline, A line from you will bring you catalogues, tacts and figures, and we will also tell you where the tractors may be seen. Address the International Harvester Company of America tlBcarparatedj Portland Ore. Champion During McCormlck tlHwatil Cilorn J'lua Portland, Oregon, 4 2-8 You Would Enjoy the Journal Ordinance Number 215. An ordinance provision for the InyliiK fun! cuiietriictlnu; of i-eint'iit Mhlt'WHlkM mill croeewnlks, on both Hldm of Third ettwt, between the enet line of "A"' atrtrt, commonly called Mali) etrcet, enet to the wt'et line of eiwt. ' I)" street. In rrlnevllle, Oreifon, mid dcflKnatlng the manner of pnylnn for sumo. The people of the city of Prineville, Oregon, ilo ordnln lis follows: Section I Thnt within ninety dnys lifter the pasioiKu of thin ordi nance, ti rement sldewulk mid curb hIiiiII be htld and . count rttrted on both sides of Third street, between the eaet line of "A" street, common ly culled Miiln Htreet, east to the went line of eiiMt "1" street, In rrlnevllle, Crook county, Oregon, anil that the coet of laying and con strtietliitt such eldev iilk and curb, nluill lie charKed HiritliiNt mid made a lien upon nil lute, parcels of hind mid adjoining real etttate, directly benefited thereby, which mild cosu for laying mid coimtruutlnK siiine, shall tie collected In the same man ner tie cohLh iiud expenses are col lected In making Htreet Improve ments; I'KOVlLiED, however, that the property owners affected by thle ordinance shall be allowed THIRTY DAYS after the piiHaagii of this ordi nance, to elect whether they will build their respective portions of said walk and curb or not, and In all canes where no not Mention of election to build euch portion or por tions of mild sidewalk and curb, hIihII be Hied by such property own er or owners, In writing with the re corder of said city, within said thirty days, the city shall proceed at once to build Hfild walk and curb, and charge the coet of same to the prop erty owners as above provided. Section 2. That the eald sidewalk shall be connected with proper ccohh wulks made of cement or etone, or Mtone utid cement combined, to be built by the city, and the costs and expenses of building mid laying of Maine, shall be paid out of the gen eral funds of the said city. Section 3 That the said sidewalks and curb, whether built by the cltr or by tlie property owners whoee property Is effected, the same shall be laid and constructed In accord ance with the clt.v ordinance or ordi nances now In force or which may be hereafter In force and In accord ance with the plans and specifica tions adopted by the City Council the 20th day of AugtiHt, 11)1:1, and on file with the city recorder of said city. 1'asned by the (,'lty Council of the city of Prineville, Oregon, after the third reading, and approved by tho mayor of said city May 5th, 11)14. U. N. Cui' TON, Mayor. AtteHt: E. O. Hyiik, Recorder, State of Oregon, ) HH County of Crook. ( ' 1, K. O. Hyde, do hereby ecrtlfv that; 1 em the duly elected iiialllled tind acting city recorder of the city of I'lluevdle, Oregon, that I have carefully compared the above fore going copy of ordinance with the original thereof, that the same In a, true and correct trnnHcrlpt there from mid of the whole of h.-i id origi nal ordinance. 10 O. IIydio,' City Recorder.