TURKEY STRONG ON BLACK SEA Her Fleet on Inland Ocean Outweighs Russia's. - HAS ARMY OF MILLION. Ottoman.' Entry Into War Ma Bring About N.w Ali9nm.nl of Pow.ro, With Probabilitioa In Favor of Alliee. Turk. Havo Long B..n Favorabl. to tho Oarman Bid. The I11I1I11I iiilvnntugv nn the lllack sea nmieiitly lies with Turkey In the uiinlii( of lioNillltU-a against KuknIh, according lu oIhitvit lu adillliou to the buttle cruiser (louden, wlilch Ima attnlind a mjxi) of 'il.'i knot, and la Olio of tliv tniiNt fonnldiililu crnft a Hunt, 11 lid the irotit'ti'tl cmliHir tlrimluu of a IM.O knot ruturd, Turkey Ima lu the lllink cii twu luiltliNlilia of Dread nought i'Iiihx, four pre I'reiulimugliM, two swift eminent 11111I iiiimeroua do atloyera null giitilionu, many of them bought from Ueriiinny. Thla Beet In chides tlii'H) linllk'Nlilpa: Kiwliml Mliiuila, iM.onu twi, 20 knots lllreiiisl (iBiiinii. 27.UUO toiia, 'tl kuola. Untight from llin.ll. Khyur-ed tlln llMilmroHMii and Torgut IteM, 0,1 N K) tons eiirh, IT knots, for merly lierninn lnttleiilit, and two others of tliu annul tyHi. Two itiiUi'Im, tlu Ilnnildli li mid tha Mcdjnllidi, S.soo toiia, kuola. Rua.ia'a Olack 8.a FI..C ItiiKaln'a Illnck urn fleet oniKlxta of st pro liri-mltiotiiilit buUli-slili. una prolM'tt'il cruiser, two nrinnri'd ifitn bonis niul a iiumlirr of old torpedo bouts mid gunboata. Three Dreiiitiiuiighta nto under con Ntrni-tloti, lint itiii jr not be In couimla alon for 11 ion t tin. If I'ortuunl be counted. Turkey la the eleventh nntlon tu bo Involved In the grent i:iiroM.iin ampule. Her lirtll Jmllnii Ima been expected fr week", and dlploiiuita now any Hint Greece, ttoiiiiiiinlii 11 ml ItiilKnrln nre IILely to Iw added, and (xmsllily I Inly. Not wllliHl.unllnu the warnings of the allies. It Inn been deemed Inrvltntilo (lint Turkey would yield to Herman in Oiieneo unci join ngiilimt Itiisnln. Sln'-e the tiiieiilni! of the war IXRl (leininn of ll.ers have arrived lu Turkey, na well a a liirh'e. quantity of munitions of wur, Including sume of the blK siege guns, (.iermnii guns were iuouiiIihI in the Dardanelles forts and a Herman olllorr, Weber 1'iiHlm, plnccd In com IDii ml All tho rortlflciitliiu of tho lloiorua nui) tho Asia Minor coast liuve been overhauled and oilnea have been sown In Crock water. Lln.up Will Favor Alliaa. If tho entrance of Turkry Into the conflict embroil Italy nnd the other Unlkiin am ten. aa expected. It will bring 3,371,000 additional men Into bat tlo, Da well at three more navies. In thla erent the lino up will probably be In fnvor of the allies. Turkey, with on army on war footing figured nt approximately 1.000.000, and navy of thirty-fire wnrnhlpa lutiniied by 31,000 men, will thus coutrlhutu 1,031.000 men to the Herman cause. The alllea will profit to the extent or 210 wnrxliliKi and a total of 2,340, 000 men contributed 111 followa: Italy Army, 1.200.000; tmvy, KIU ships mau ned by 80,000. (Irecco-Army, 150,000; navy, forty-one ahlpa, ninnned by 30, 000. lliilgiirln-Army, 3HO.OO0. nnd Iloumauiu, army, 500,000. About Itul gnrln'a 'future moves there la much doubt, na ahe la atlll bitter ngnlnst her enemlea In the recent aiK-ond llalknn war, nnd ahe may Join Turkey. Doubt About Goabtn and Bre.lau. ' Turkey mobilized her army early In . AllKUHt, auppoKedly with the Uionil aupport of tliu Uertuan Kvernmeut. It wiih thniiKht the fort'ea would bo em ployed iiKiiliiHt Greece for the recovery of territory lost lu the Knlkiin war. Greece houifht the bitttlclilpg Missis alipl nnd Idaho from the United StnleH, and to offHct tills Turkey pur chiiHed ostciiNlhly two alilps from Cler niaiiy, the Goulien nnd llrcsluu, which aoiiKht refiiKO from the allied fleet lu the Mediterranean. There has been some don lit, however, that there was a bona llde purchiiHO, for It has been re ported that thcNe ships, althotiKh Hy ing tho creHcent. retained their Ger inau crews and olllccrs. Tremendoim pi-oNHiire was brought by German advisers to Induce Turkey to abandon tho plans ak'ainst Greece nnd talio the field UKalnst ItUHula. Tlio staKKerliig cost of continuing the mobilization raided a political storm, nnd tlio minister of wnr and his party wore put on tho defensive. The action of the entente powers threatening dire coiiNoiiuiMices If Turkey doclnrcd war, followed by German setbacks In Rus sia, ItelKlum nnd Prance, finally forced n demobilization. liusHla anticipated Turkey's violation of neutrality, Nearly two weeks ago the archives of the Iinsslau embnssy wore transferred to Odessa. War Bloaoh.a Our Books. White socks nre going to be the fash ion. This applies to men and women alike. This time It Is not Onme fash ion who sets the style, but tho storn necessity of war. Several stocking makers announced tlmt ns soon aa the present supply of dyes Is exhausted they will linve to miilte white foot wear. The dyes enme from Germany, nnd the Importation ba1; alraist ceased. JOSEPH G. CANNON jfi-v -'""'-iff : .rV 0 ty Aninrlran 1'rml. Auorl.llna. Ex Speaker Cannon, who will again reprcaent an llllonla district In Con gre.s. GUITERREZ IS IMPRISONED Talegram Purporting to Be From Carranza Accuiea Villa. New YorR. General Kulallo Outtor tft, who was elected prealdent of Mex ico nt the recent Akiiiib riillentes con vention, has been Imprisoned by Gen eral r"rnnclaco Vllln, according to 0 leicKrain suld to come from General VemiHtlnno Cnrraiu.t, and nuido public hire by Iho Mexican bureau of Infor mation, the aamo agency that an nounced Oulterre hnd repudluted the acta of the convention electing him. The tulCKrum nccredlled to General rarriinzu did not any where the new president had been raptured or where he was believed lo be Incarcerated. The rciiKon for the seizure and con finement of Gulterrez, the message snld. wns that he hud refuned to be dominated by tho demands of the Vil la faction. El Pnso, Tex. General ,Cnrrnna's charite us given out at New York that General Kulnllo Gulterrez, named pro visional president by the Aguua Call etiles conference, wuij not credited by either Carranza or Villa agents here, Vho had received no official or Indi rect Information of the report. The Vlllu agents pointed out that Gulterrez would not have been select ed for the post uulcss be bud been willing to occupy It, Cotton Loan Is Lawful. Washington. No violation of the anti-trust laws Is threatened by the $13f,000,000 cotton loan fund plan, ac cording to an opinion handed down by Attorney General Gregory at the request of President Wilson. Montana Is for Suffrage. Helena, Mont. Returns from more than 60 per cent of outstanding pre cincts show the woman suffrage amendment and the farm loan Initia tive act are the only measures submit ted at the election to pass. ALLIES ASK JAPAN TO HELP Fre Hand In China Bald to be Offered as Inducement, Pekln. Intlclng offers have been made to Japan by agoutB of the allies In China to Induce the Mikado to throw 200,000 of his seasoned troops Into tho Kuropean scene of war. Following the fall of Tslng-Tau, which releases Japanese troops and warships and removes any German menace to Japan's prestige lu the Orient, the allies are exerting every effort to bring Japan Into the western conflict. A guarantee of a freer hand In the affairs of China Is Said here to be the price offered for the Japanese troops. The younger statesmen nre Bnld to have received the proffer with enthusiasm, but the more conservative are dubious. Boxing Game Over In California. San Ktnnclsco. The boxing game will shut up shop in California about tho first of December. The antl-flght bill, which prohibits all save four round amateur contests, was carried at tha election. THE MARKETS. Portland. Wheat Club, $1.14; bluestem $1.18; red Russian, $1.08. Hay Timothy, $15.60; alfalfa, $13.60. Butter Creamery, 35o. Eggs Ranch, 38c. Seattle. Wheat Bluestem $1.16; club $1.H; red Russian, $1.08. Hay Timothy, $16 per ton; alfalfa, $13 per ton. Butter Creamery, 35c. Ekes 40c. .x . BATTLE CONTINUES ALONG WHOLE LIKE From Sea to Vosges Intensity of Struggle Exceeds All Events of War. Paris. A general battle has been proceeding along the whole front from the sea to the Vosges Mountains for the past three days without the Ger mans having been able to find a weak spot In the French defenses. However, It still la In Klanders that Interest In the formidable and seem ingly Interminable battle centers. The Germans are concentrating there all the men they can get and ceaselessly are hurling them against the allies' lines. Never has this method been directed with as much tenacity and fury as now, It Is the British who bear the brunt of those onslaughts. In many places their lines have become so thin, says an officer who baa been In that region the past fortnight, that only by show ing obstinacy worthy of the traditions of Waterloo are they able to bold their ground. Their losses In officers have been terrible. One battalion of foot guards went into action commanded by a non commissioned officer. Certain caval ry regiments have lost half their ef fective strength. The fight rages with the greatest Intensity south of Ypres on the Manln road, the Ypres Canal, the Lys and the plateau crossed by the road from Ypres to Annentleres. Here the of fensive by the nlllee has been met by violent counter attacks delivered by a German active army corps Just brought from Klanders, supported by the concentrated fire of a great body of massed batteries. The Germans so far are said to have achieved nothing more than tempor ary checks, nnd It Is claimed that slowly but surely the allies creep for ward. BERLIN COUNTS ON VICTORY 3,000,000 Germans and Austrian. Reported Ready to Crush Enemy. London. "It Is asaerted In Berlin that Germany nnd Austria-Hungary now have concentrated about 3,000,000 soldiers on the line from Thorn to Cracow, nnd this Is considered suffi cient to crush tho Russian forces," saya a dispatch from- Copenhagen to the Times. The message continues: "Military authorities declare that the result of tho coming battle Is not In doubt and that the Russian army will be completely destroyed. They explain that it Is necessary to allow the, Russians to advance to the fron tier. In order to prevent them from making a good retreat' after their de feat "The present retirement of the Ger mans Is necessary, they say, in order to have the railways Immediately be hind the army for the approaching main battle." Democrat Elected Wisconsin Senator. Milwaukee, Wis. State Senator Paul Hunting, democrat, reached the tape In the United States senatorial race JuBt 1001 votes ahead of his re publican opponent. Governor Francis E. McGovern. RUSSIANS GROSSING . PRUSSIAN FRONTIER Petrograd. The official statement Issued from general headquarters says: "On the Eastern Prussian frontier our troops have dislodged the Ger mans from the region of Wirbnllen, which waB strongly fortified, and have progressed as far ns Stulluponen (16 miles oast-northeast of Gunibien). In the region of Romlnten forest and Lyck our troops continue to press on tho heels of the rear guards of the enemy. "On the left bank of the VUtula our cavalry has penetrated German terri tory, damaging the railway near Pleachen station, to the northwest of Knllsz. "In Gallcla our troops are continu ing their offensive movement. In the latest engagements on the San River we captured 125 officers and 12,000 soldiers, as well as rapid-ftrers and munitions of war. South of Frzemysl, on November 6, we took more than 1000 prisonors." The rapidity of the movement on the battlefields in Poland have been unequaled since the days of Napoleon. Deducting the time spent in actual fighting the Russian pursuit has been pressed for more than a week at a rate averaging 14 miles a day over the Polish roads, which are heavy after the rainy season. Death Penalty Wins In Oregon. Portland. Returns on the amend ment to prohibit the execution of the death penalty In Oregon Indicate de feat of the measure. The majority as it now stands against the bill Is 1067. where you , quality at the price of only medium grade. TIrce, Tubc3 Jlve r'-. CV'ft1'?7 nt only bulldci. uiu Tire Specialists 1 lnrfjcri in America where only tires are maae. Come in to- (iay uud learn why Firestone efficitney can give you 'J l,iOt for Your Money G. W. WILSON, You . would . enjoy . the . Journal Only $1.50 per Year 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 The Journal is Cheap at $1.50 a year Come to the new head quarters for i ires ana Accessories cet the extra Firestone and Accessories average price becaase Firestone cud the iirestone Factory is the In Firtt Cut and Final Economy Prineville, Ore. I and Oysters Notice for Publication. Department of the Interior. L. S. Lund Ollke at The llte. Ore, October W, 1!14. Notice Is hereby mlven tlmt Klchnrd It. Hlrupler of Prineville, Ore., who on March 2H, 1X1(1 rnurlu liofru.iitolwl ...Ore V, nf.I'M nnd on Januury 2. 1914, made nddl- iniii nomestetto entry imo. uiz-iw, for ael aiwiflnn U til n,.l t..l w-ctlon 23, and awj nwj section 24. lownxnip 10 soiun, rnne i east, Willamette meridian, has filed notice of Intention to make final three year proof to establish claim to the land above described before Warren Hrnwn. eount.v elorlr nu Ppmuvllla Oregon, 00 the 28tb day of Novern 1 . i . . I'llllrriNrf M n m.. nm iltnuaa..a Curt Wilson, Paul A. llertschlnari r,iKr Dunny, rranx .Mertscning, all of Prluevllle, Oreiron. H. Fka.nk Woodcock, 10 22p Register. notice for Publication. Department of the Interior. U. 8. Laud Otlice at The Dal lea. Ore. October l.'l, 1914. Notice Is hereby given thut Shellle Holland of Held, Oregron, who on February 6, lull, made homestead: entrv No. OfcO! for nej. m sej, section 27, aw, section 26, nwj nwi sectlou 35, townnhlp 18 south, range 19 east, Willamette meridian, lias tiled notice of Intention to make final three year proof to establish claim to the land above described, before A. S. Fotc(r. L 8. Commissioner, at Hampton, Oregon, on the 28th day of Novem ber, 1914. Claimant names as witnesses: Paul Held, Jeferson V. Houston, Thomns Klckman, of Held, Ore., and Floyd Baker, of Roberts. Ore. 10-22p II. Fhank Woodcock. Register. Hotlce for Publication. Department of the Interior. U. S. Land Office at The Dalles. Ore. September 28. 11)14. Notice Is hereby given that Claude A. Larkln of Rivers, Oregon, who on May 23, 11)11, made homestead entrv ,o. 08972, for e section 35, township 19 south, range 17 east, Willamette meridian, has filed notice of Intention to 111 like final three rear proof to establlnh claim to the land above described, before A. S. Fogg, V. S. Commissioner, at Hampton, Oregon. ion tbel4tb day of November, 1914 j Claimant names as witnesses: C. S. Marlon, of Held, Ore.. Martin Hall I meyer, George Beebe, and E. Nelson, ; of Rivers, Ore. : 10-15p H. Frank Woodcock, Register. ' Notice far Publication. j Department of the Interior. , C. S. Land Office at The Dalles. Oregon. j September 28i.li, 1914. 1 Notice is hereby given that j Walter M. Smith 'of Held, Oregon, who on April 24. 1911, ' made homestead entry No, 0770 for I swj ewL sec. 8, s) eei, sec. 7, nwj nwi, eec. 17 ami ncj stctton 18, township 19 ; south, tanae 19 east, Willamette merid ; ian, has filed notice of intention to make final three year proof to establish claim I to the land above described before A. S. ' Fogg, U. S. Commissioner, at Hampton, Oregon, on the 16th day of November, .; 1914. i Claimant names as witnesses: Clyde i Blaslev, Harry Evans. Warren G. Libby ' and Paul Held, all of Held, Oregon, j 10 8p H. Frank Woodcock, Register Notice of Guardian's Sale of R.al Estate. Notice le hereby given by the un dersigned, the guardian of the per son aud property of Nora Miller, a minor, that he will, pursuant to an order ol the county court of Crook county, Oregon, made and entered on the 8th day of September, 1914. from and after the 13th 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 ol block eight. In Monroe Hodges' plat of Prineville, Oregon, as the same ap pears of record In the office of the county clerk of crook county, Ore- I gon, and an undivided one-half Inter est In lots seven and eight In block : fourteen In the Fourth Addition to Frlnevtlle, Oregon, ns the same ap- I pears of record In the office of the I county clerk of t Took county gon. The said Bale to be made In Prineville, Oregon, and shall I convey all the right, title and Inter- ! est of the said Nora Miller In the real -estate above descrleed. Terms and conditions of sale, cash. Dated this 15th day of Oct. 1914. 11. F. Johnson, Guardian of Nora Miller, a Minor. Report of the Condition of THE CROOK COUNTY BANK at Prine ville, in the state of Oregon, at the clone ot business Oct. 31, 1914: BESOCRCKS, Loans and discounts 1157,128.09 Overdraft., secured and unsecured.. , 2,130.96 Bonds, and warrants 6,453.28 Stocks ami other securities 327.00 Bonking house 19,184 W Furniture and fixture. 3,861.78 Other real estate owned,. . 1,309.14 Due from banks (not reserve bank.), 976.61 Due from approved reserve bank.. . . . 38,077.70 Checks and other cash Item. 603.0 Cash on hand 12,062.28 Total 242,133.& LIABILITIES, Capital stock paid in 36,000.00 Surplus fund 14,000.00 Undivided profits, less expense, and taxe. paid , 11,454.45 Due lo bank, and banker. 618 24 Deposit, due State Treasurer 5,000.00 Individual deposit, subject to check. 155,144.90 Demand certificate, ot deposit 233.00 Cashier, check, outstanding 1,992.09 Time certificates of deposit 17,693.27 Total , , $212,138.95 State of Oregon, County of Crook, s. : I, C. M. Elklns, cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above state ment is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. O. M. Elklns, Cashier. Subscribed and .worn to before me this 6th day of Nov., 1914. j. B. Bell, Notary Public Correct Attest: Warren Brown D. F. STEWART Director.. Crook County Journal, 11.50 per yr.