SENATE PASSES DEFICIENCY BILL Democrats Pass Bill 32 to 25 and Measure Now Goes to Conference. Washington, Doroocratlo leader by supreme effort In tb olliimx of the cotton fight guthariid thnlr faltering forces, and, (purring thiim on with eloquent app.nli for party solidarity, defeated the coalition to It move to postpone notion Indefinitely, 32 to 2G. Senators Clitrk of Arkansas, Smith Of Georgia, Hmltb of Soulb Ciirollna, Vkrdnmiin and Whit were the dumo emtio senators who fought to th)) end, voting with tlit republicans to pout nun ti action. Till would luive killed the bill for the picHunt session of oongress. The enlivening contest Hint murktd the passage of the bill foreshadowed thu and of the loug drnwu aut session of congress, which bus kept flags fly ing ovi-r tits cupllol almost cemtinu oimly for tlm past two yours, The tux bill went to thu house on Monday find will be sunt to con formica. An agree ment on the measure between the two house probably will be reached by the middle of this week. Line Only Democrat Voting No. The vote on the revenue bill fol lowed party lines with one exception, Senator 1 .11 ne, of Oregon, democrat, voting ngtiliiHt It. Immediately after II passage the senate, on motion of Senator Blmmons, Insisted on It amendment and ftskod conference with (he house. Conferee mimed were Senator Simmons, Wllllnms, Stone, MnCuinber nd Clnrk of Wyoming. The cotton relief amendment, pro posed by the senators from the cot ton slates, wa dufeuled by a voto of 21 to 40. The amendment provided for an Is sue of $0,0(10,000 of three year, 4 per cent government bonds, In denomina tion of $10, $20, $50 and $100, to be used to purchuse, from producers, 5,000,000 bales or cotton ut not .more than 10 rent a pound. Important Law Passed. Among the most. Important of the laws enacted by congress since De cember 1, 1913, were: Perioral reserve act, treating 12 re glomil reserve bunks and federal re serve board of control and reforming the currency system, Federal trndo commission act, to investigate organization, conduct and practice of Industrial corporations, Inquire Into unfair competition and al leged violation of null trust acts, and aid the department of Justice and courts In the prosecution of business offenders. Clayton antitrust net, which pro vides for guilt of Individuals connect ed with corporations convicted of vio lating the anti trust luws, limits Inter locking directorates, prohibits holding companle which will lessen competi tion and prevents exclusive and tying contracts. Act repealing provision of the Pan ama cnnul law exempting from pay ment of tolls American vessels en gaged In const-wise shipping of the Pulled Stute. The Ahiskn railroad law. Laws placing on a war footing the volunteer mill tin and naval militia of the state. Revenue law Imposing special In ternal revenue taxes to aggregate ap proximate annual revenue of $108,000, 000 to offset estimated treasury defi cit. Amendment to Panama canal act admitting to American registry for-elgn-bullt ship of American owner ship to engnge In oversous and South American trade. emergency currency act, permitting banks of national currency associa tions to Ihbuo circulating notes up to 125 per cent of their unimpaired capi tal n ml surplus. - General appropriations for govern ment expenses aggregating approxi mately $1,200,000,000. Appropriation of $20,000,000 for riv ers mid hurliors Improvements at dis cretion of war department. Prohibiting Importation of opium ex cept for medicinal purposes under treasury regulation, and placing pro hibitive tax of $300 n pound on opium manufactured In the United States for smoking purposes. Authorizing pigment of money or ders nt any money-order office In country. Providing agricultural entry of phos phate, nitrate, potash and other min eral lands, Huge Number of Prisoner Taken. Ilerlln. The war office gave out the following recently compiled list of prisoners now In German concentra tion camps, 08 revised up until Octo ber 1. Drillsh, ISO officers, 8.C00 mon. French, 2,050 officers, 123,000 mon. RuHSluna, 2,150 officers, 1)2,000 men. General Hamilton Killed In Action. London. It was announced that Major General H. I. W. Hamilton has been killed In action. GENIAL VON KLLCX lis Flimo by Ain.rtwn I'rwH Association. General Von Kluck, commander of th right wing of th Carman army which Invaded Franc through Bel glum. BRIEF WAR NEWS During the past week tho German followed up their capture of Antwerp by occupying unopposed Ostend, a tlelglsn port on the North Sea, near where the German right wing and the allies' left engaged In a struggle to prevent Gorman occupation of French ports, which would bring them nearer to the Kngllsh coast. The allied Hue In till region run from a point on the coast which hu not been disclosed. Arras I the cetie of the most persistent fighting. The German are trying to break through to the Calais railway while the French are attempting to push the German front to the northeast. The fighting has only bdgtin In this district, however, for the flermans, who would consider It a great ucces to reach the coast of France, have brought up strong reinforcement and will strive with all their might to achieve tl.l object The sllle also can bring up rein forcements both by sea and land and have been doing o, which make It certain that a great battle must be fought before either side give ground. The allies will be assisted by the llrlllsh ships when the fighting reaches a point near the coast. Little definite new came during the week .from the Vistula Klver, where the Kusuiuns claim to have repulsed a German attack. Whether or not the German advance on Warsaw has been permanently checked only tho future can show. One version has It that the Germans are prepurlng to winter In Poland. The Russian force In Onltcln and alon, the Bust Prussian border are reported to have been driven back and placed on the defensive. They have had to adopt waiting tactics, white the main Slav armies contest the threatened capture of Wursuw and the occupation or the Vistula basin. General von Illudenberg's success In entrenching his army on Russian ter ritory 150 miles from the German frontier has eliminated during the week the possibility that a Russian offensive movement can be relied up on to usslst the Immediate develop ment of the campaign In France and Belgium. There have been guarded references In tire Purls official announcements during the week to an advance on Met which Is the main defensive po sition of the German left center. Met seems to' have become nn objective for the French general staff. A sud den change In the direction of the al lies' mnln rorees and an Invasion In rorce of northern Lorraine are possi ble developments of this week's, rec onnnlHimccs along the Metis roads. The South African rebellion, which occurred early ltu tho week, is of questionable' Importance. The British government has acted with great promptness In Insuring the assistance of Portugese troops If the mutiny should develop serious proportions. That It will do sd in the face of thefl pro-British sympathies of moHt of the lloer government lundors Is Improb able. The valuo of" tho naval encounters of the week Is about equally divided. Gorman submarines have sunk a Brit ish and a Russian light cruiBer, and British warshlpa have destroyed four German torpodo boat destroyers. Anti-German Riot Started in London, London. Anti-German rioting In Loudon caused the destruction of a score of shops. Duinnge was done In the Doptford borough and In Old Kent rond. In the former district several stores were attacked and sot afire. British Losse Are 13,500. London. An official report by Gen eral French, commanding the British expeditionary force, gives the total of British killed, wounded and missing from September 12 to October 8 aB SCI officers and ,12,980 men, GIGANTIC BATTLE ON EASTERN WING Germans Endeaver to Break Through to Paris By Way ( of Seacoast. Pari. A gigantic battle of startl Ing magnitude and great Importance 1 being waged with desperate energy in a field of vast proportion along Ir regular line Just acros the border In Belgium. Th Germans have burled an enormous force against the allies French, British and Belgian troop who are massed on a front from Ar oientier past Lille, to Ypre and then to the sea. It I the blow which ba been threatened since the German menace of a new drive on Pari by wuy of the seacoast became an ever present bogy to Parisian. The but tle Is being fought within 100 mile of London a the crow flies. Generally speaking, the fighting of the' most desperate character Is con fined to the limit of the quadrangle described by Ypre, Monln, Ostend and a point on the seacoast between Nleuport and the Belgian border. What In previous war would have been culled great battle were fought on the eastern wing of the fighting line stretching from the Belgian coast to Switzerland. In thl great battle of nations, bow ever, these rights are regarded merely a Incident. Tlie righting always has been of the most forceful nature In this district, owing to the strenuous effort of the Germane to obtain pos sesslon of the strong fortresses of Ver dun, Toul and Kplnal In order to open a way from Metz Into France. St. Die, on the Meurthe, 32 miles northeast of Kplnal, waa the center or the attacks, which resulted In a re pulse for the German with beavy casual tie. BRITISH SINK 4 DESTROYERS Admiralty Report On Officer and Four Man Wounded. Iondon. Four German destroyers, were engaged and sunk off the Dutch coast by a British cruiser and four torpedo-boat destroyers. According to an announcement made by tho secretary of the British Admiralty, the fjrltlnh vessels In the action were the light cruiser Undaunt ed end the torpedo-boat destroyers Lance,' Lennon, Legion and Loyal. Thus the British sailors have taken speedy revenge for the sinking of the British cruiser Uawke by a German submarine. The Admiralty announce that the British losses In the engagement were one officer and four men wounded. The dnmnge to the British destroyers wus slight. German Submarine Attack a Surprise. Aberdeen, Scotland. The attack on the British cruiser Hawke, which wa sunk by a German submarine, came as a great surprise to those aboard the cruiser, according to the survivors who arrived here. Nothing was seen to Indicate the presence of a subma rine until after the explosion. The Hawke sank In five minutes and hun dreds of men, some or them In cork Jackets and others hanging to pieces or wreckage, were scattered about'in the water. DECISIVE BATTLE IMMINENT IN EAST Berlin, via The Hague and London. Preparations are under way Tor a decisive buttle in the eastern arena of the war, where Austrian and German armies have taken position along the River Vistula and the River San and are ready for eventualities. The re-taking of Przemysl, as an nounced from Austrian sources, has permitted the unfolding of the power of the Austrinns in the direction of Lemberg and their advance In the southern Carpathian mountains Is menacing the extreme left whig of the Russians. Desperate fighting Is already going on along the center of the two armies on the bunks of the Vistula. This action has been In a measure delayed owing to the bad condition of the rondB In Boutharn Poland and the presence of sections of swampy land. This condition bus made necessary detours on the part of the Austrian and German forces. The Russian army Is east of the Vistula. This fact Is regarded In Ber lin as making Kb advance and the general management of the campaign a difficult matter, and at the- same time unfavorable. , Battle on at Belfort. Berlin. According to a telegram from Zurich received by the Berul-of-flclal Cologne Gazette, heavy German mortars have been placed east of the fortress of Belfort, where the fighting already has begun. The Germans o far are gaining ground, though slowly. Here's Where You Get Tires, Tubes and Accessories And that means that here you get the most for your money. Most miles per dollar and most comfort per mile. Firestone quality has led the world for fourteen years. There is no argument about it, But because they have the largest and best equipped tire factory, and only the top notch men, the prices are right. Call and See Non-Skid Smooth Tread All Types All Sixes G. W. WILSON, You . would . enjoy . the . Journal Only $1.50 Just Arrived Double Deck All Steel Bed Springs Ostermoor Mattresses Art Squares and Rugs Imported Vienna Bent Wood Chirs Also a Fine Lot of Sewing Machines A. H. Lippman & Co "PRINORE" AND "STANDARD" Prineville Flour City Meat Market HORIGAN & REINKE, Props. Choice Home-Made Hams, Bacon and Lard Fresh Fish Fruit and Vegetables in Season iff w Prineville, Ore. per Year and Oysters Nolle, for Publication. Department of the Interior, fj. S. Land Office at Tlm Dalle, Ore. September 2S. 11)14. Notice I hereby given that Claude A, Larkln of Rivera, Oregon, who on May 23, Wll. made homestead entrv No. 08972, for section 5, township 19 iiouth, range- 17 east, Willamette meridian, has filed notice of Intention tu make final three year proof to establish claim , to the land above described, More A. S. Fogg, V. 8. Commissioner, at Hampton, Oregon, on toe mh uy or November, 1914 ' Claimant nemes as witnesses: C. S. Marlon, of Held, Ore., Martin Hall merer, George Beebe, and E. Nelson, of Rivers, Ore. 10-hi II. Fhak Wooikxxx, Reenter. - Hotire f.r Publication. i Department of the lrirerior. V. S. Land OH5i at The Dalles, Oreson. S-plemter iftitb.lUU. Kotice i hereby given that ' Walter Mv Smith of Held. Oreifon, who on April 24. 1911, maoe tionieitenj entry No. (W770 for wj J. msc. 8, i eej. w. 7, nwj nwj, fee. 17 and n-J, cti. n 18, township 19 omri, tana ill ea.t, Willamette merid ian, haa filed notice of intention to make final three rear proof to etablih claim to the land above described before A. S. roKK. U. S. Ommi.moner. at Hampton. Oreiron, on the 16ru day of November, Claimant name. a withese: Clyd Blaaley, Harrr Evan. Warren G. Libby and Paul Held, all of Held, Oregon, 10 8p H. Frank Woodcock, Register Kotic. for Publication. Not Coal Land , Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office, Lakeview, Or., Aii(!nst 81, 1914. Notice i herehr ciren that Euiil Van Lake of Imperial, Oregon, who on March 11, 1910, made homestead entrv, act Febra ary 19, 1909, So. 03101, for ne sec 15, te tec 10, township 21 eonth, range 19 east, Willamette meiidian, haa filed notice of intention to make final three year proof, to establish claim to the land above described before A. S. Fogg, U. S. Commiriioner, at Hampton, Ore., on the 31st day of October, 1914. Claimant name, as witnesses: Burr Rlack, Walter T. Harrison, Everette Lee RitiKS of Hampton. Oregon, and Wm. Titos, of Imperial. Oregon. 9-24 J as. P. Bdboess, Register. Notice tor Publication Department of the Interior, U. 8. Land Office at The Dalles. Ore. September 5, 1914. Kotice is hereby given that Kelwin Montgomery of Prineville, Oregon, who, on April 7, 1911, made homestead entry No. 0623 toi cj f J, sj nej, section 20, township 14 south, range 14 east. Willamette Meridian, has tiled notice of intention to make final three year proof to es tablish claim to the land above described, before Timothy E. J. Duffy, a United States Commissioner, at his office at Prineville. Oregon, on the 29th day of October, 1914. Claimant names as witnesses: John T. Houston, Nicholas Rachor, Noah W. Floyd, George W. Dodoon, all ol Prine ville, Oregon. 9 24 H. Fraxk Woodcock, Register. Kotice of Guardian's Sale of Real Estate. Notice l hereby iflven by the un- dersljrned, the guardian of the per son and property of Nora Miller, a ! minor, that be will, pursuant to an I order of the county court of Crook 'county, Oregon, made and entered ,on the 8tn day of September, 1914. from and after the l:ith day of No vember, 1914, sell at private sale the following; ' described real property belonging to his said ward at pri vate sale, to wit: An undivided one half Interest In lot five of block eight, In Monroe Hodges' plat ot Prineville, Oregon, as the same ap pears of record In the office of the county clerk of crook county, Ore gon, and an undivided one-half Inter est In lots seven and eight In block fourteen In the Fourth Addition to Prineville;, Oregon, as the same ap pears of record lu the office of the county clerk of rook county gon. The said sale to be made In Prineville, Oregon, and shall convey all the right, title and Inter est ot the said Nora Miller In the real estate abovedescriced. Terms and conditions of sale. cash. Dated this 13th day of Oct. 1914. P. F. Johnson, Guardian of Nora Miller, a Minor. Notice tor Publication. Department of the Interior. U. S. Laud Office at The Dalles, Ore. August 29, 1914. Notice is heieby given that Claudia C. Wonderly whose post office ad widat jb rViuevilie. Oregon, did on the 3d day of November, 1913, file in this office sworn statement and application No. 012193, to purchase the sej, section 6. township 15 south, range 19 east, Willamette meridian, and the timber thereon, under the pro visions of the act of June 3. 1878. and ' acts amendatoiy, known asthe"Ttu)ber and stone Law, at sucn value as might be fixed by appraisement, and that pursuant to such application, the land and timber thereon have been ap praised, $805 00, the timber estimated 1,075,000 board feet at 60c per M, and and the land at f 100.00; that said appli cant will offer final proof in sup port of her application and sworn statement on the 0th day ol November, 1914, before Warren Brown, county clerk, at Prineville, Oregon. Any person is at liberty to protest this purchase before entry, or initiate a contest at any time before patent issues by tiling it corroborated affidavit in this office, alleging facts which would defeat the entry. 9-3 II. Frank Woodcock, Register. Kotice to Creditors Notice is heieby given by the under signed, the administrator of the estate of John Grant, deceased, to the credi tors of said deceased and to all persons having claims against said estate to present the same to the undersigned at bia office in Prineville, Oregon, with the proper vouchers, within six months from the first publication of this notice. Published first time Sept. 24, 1914. M. R. Elliott, Administrator of the Estate of John Grant, deceased. ,