Image provided by: Crook County Historical Society/Bowman Museum; Prineville, OR
About Crook County journal. (Prineville, Or.) 189?-1921 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 26, 1918)
rune ESS LOCAL "NEWS IN BRIEF ES2 C. A. George wai in from Barnes Saturday. J. E. Fuller tat In the city Tucs dny from Howard. John Fleming of Bend was a vis itor here yesterday. Miss Gladys Breon was a visitor In the city Tuesday, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Rannells are tn the city from Paulina. Mr. and Mrs. James Cram are in the city from Roberts. Fred McCaffrey was In Prineville (or the dance last night. Miss Jessie Hartley was In Prnevlle several days lal week. Mr. ond Mrs. Parrlsh and son are In the city for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. J. O. F. Anderson are tn the city from Howard. Miss Eleanor Towner is home from O. A. C. for the holidays. John Milliorn of Roberts was a vis itor In the city Tuesday. Charles Valpey was a business vis itor from Howard Monday. Allie Henry of Paulina was a vis itor in the city last Tuesday. Lieutenant Ret Powell of O. A. C. Is visiting relatives this week. Fred Houston spent Christmas va cation with relatives at Held. I Miss Pauline Truesdale is visiting frineds in Prineville this week. j A dinner dance will be given at the ; Hotel Prineville Kriiiaf evening. j Frank Rice was over from Red-1 mond for the dance Uist nigtt. Mr.. and Mrs. Bon Tone of Sisters; are Visitors ia fia c":; '.Ins week. ) - Mlsa Es'Uer Trenne spout Christ-1 mas with her paruiits at Roberts. J H. Carlin was in the city P;.t-1 nrday from his ranch at Roberts. j Mr. and Mrs. Dean Houston and family are in the city for the holidays. Jack Sather and a party of friends from Bend, spent Christmas in Prine ville. Misses Mabel and Mildred Slayton are home from 0. A. C. for the holi days. Mrs. B. C. Williams of Corvallis is visiting her daughter. Mrs. C. A. Da volt. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Ferguson of Roberts are visitors in the city this week. Samuel F. Sippy and Mrs. Martha Handle were married in Prineville yesterday. Biddle Bell of Centralia, Wash., Is spending the week with his mother. Mrs. M. H. Bell. There will be services at the usual hours at the Catholic church on Sun day, December 29. Dr. Leland Belknap Is home for the holidays. Leland is a member of the Naval Reserve. Hobart Reams arrived from Cor vallis Tuesday evening and Is spend ing the holdiays at home. Sheriff-elect John Combs returned the first of the week from Idaho and Salt Lake City, where he has been ince the election. He Is preparing to assume his duties as sheriff after the first of January. w. a. s. ESTRAT NOTICE . Notice is hereby given that the fol lowing hogs have been taken up at my ranch on the Ochoco as strays: One red and black spotted sow, and four red shoats, being approximately three months old, none carrying any marks. Owner may reclaim same by prov ing property and paying feeding and advertisng costs. Vt3c T. H. LAFOLLETTE SS&SSB5fiaaAfififi GREETINGS We wish our many friends a Happy and Prosperous New Years D. P. ADAMSON & COMPANY 8 Will Stanton was a visitor In the city Monday. R. H. Kineaid was a visitor In the city Monday. David Weaver was a visitor in the city Saturday. R. L. Schee returned to Comp Lew is this morning. ' Wm. Porter waa a business visitor tn the city Monday. Raymond Calavan of Howard was in the city Monday. Adrian Yanoey la home from Eu gene for tho holidays. Miss Edith Smith is spending her vacation In Prineville. Orville Osborn was" a business vis itor in the city Monday. Oscar Prose is home from Camp Lewis tor the holidays. George Taylor is home on a fur lough from Camp Lewis. R. W. Donnelly has gone to Port land to spend Christmas. Miss Dessel Johnson Is home from Eugene for the holidays. Sergeant R. S. Blxon is home on a furlough from Camp Lewis. John Combs has gone on a busi ness trip to Nampa, Idaho. Miss Helen F.lkins Is home from O. A. C. for the Christmas holidays. L. J. Oeden and Neah Floyd were business visitors in the city Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Windom wera in the city last week end from Culver. Mrs. 'Wad Houston uiul Miss V!o tiir'a il.'.i -it fcrj in c.ty Ill's week. Mr. and Mrs. Pit" Magers were In the city from their home at Howard Monday. Max CumtinK. an nftorrey r-f Red mond, was a business visitor in the city Tuesday. John M. Preen of Ashwood is spending tho holidays with his family iu Prineville. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Angell and children of Paulina were in the city last week end. George Stearns, who has been at tending the S. A. T. C. at Eugene, ar rived home Sunday. R. L. Schee is spending the wek in Prineville. He will return to Camp Lewis in a few days. Luckey Bonney arrived home from Eugene Sunday. He has been attend ing the S. A. T. C. at the U. of O. Oren Noble is expected home to night. He is returning from over seas service in the Hydroplane Divis ion. The Ladies' Book Review Club will meet at the home of Mrs. M. E. Brink Saturday. December 28 at 2:00 p. m. . Rev. F. C. Laslette, pastor of the Glencoe Baptist church at Portland, is visiting at the home of W. S. Ayres this week. John Bolter of Gateway was in the city Tuesday. His family accompan ied him home to spend Christmas week. V. V. Harpham, who has been on detail at the district forester's office in Portland, has returned to Prine ville. Captain J. H. Rosenberg Is on his way home from a Texas camp, where he has' been - stationed for several months. Misses Tona and Clista Cornett ar rived home Friday for the Christmas vacation. They are attending school in Walla Walla. Chester Taylor arrived Tuesday on a furlough from Camp Lewis and is visiting his wife, who is a member of the High School faculty. F It .Movct ad daughter Mnrti of Paulina, wero tn Prineville hut Week end. j Mrs. U. W. Rea was railed to Spo , kane Friday because of the death of hs sister. Robert Wiley returned Saturday fiom San Fransio wtieic ho has been for several months. Miss Caroline Thronson arrived Saturday from Dayton Wtishlnittou and will spend Christmas here with violatives. C. W. Foster and Misa Hanoi Sulli van left Monday evening for Port land, where they, will qpeml Christ mas with relatives. ' I1SM hi OTIC K FOR rt BLICATION TMar1mnt of h Interior, U. ft. t.anl Of. rW at Thr ltalke, Umrua. IJwrnbar i. IUIS. NOT1CK fa tirrrhy givtn trmt MAKTHA K. SMITH of IMnavUla, O won, who, on Juna ft. 191. mit ItffMTt Land Application No. UI&&03, for SVl SWV, Section sa, Tixrnahip It Soulh. Kan I? Kaat. Willaawtte Mmdian, haa fiM notira of imvntion to niaka final Uwn Land Proof, to fatahlivh claim to th land abov drarriWd, Wfora Warrrn Brown. Clark of tha Circuit CVurt, at r'rihi'Villa, Oregon, on tha th day of Krhruarr, IKIK. Claimant naim-e aa witntwwat Samutl M. Ballry. 1. Kay Ballry, Alb.it Way, Mary b. Way. ail of Frinrvlll Otvtp.n. H. FRANK WOODCOCK, TttiP llvutaL'f. JUSEEICAN ARMY . ENTERS FRUSSIA Populace Is Quiet and No Dem ons' rati Dns Occur as Third Army Advances. American Amiy of Occupation. N" d-m.iptmtirns, either friendly o: ; hostile, marked the entry of -Mnj General Dickman's army into Ger many Sunday. The frontier wi ! crossed early In the day, aud by n'n'" fall the Americans had moved forwa 12 miles, reaching Ilagden on tho In and Saarholzbach on the rllit. Tic ( line extended along the Saur rlni ; and through Saarburg and Troves, I The reception given the. America"; ! differed from that In Luxemburg an-' j parts of Belgium and parts of l'mm-i i There they were welcomed as ilcln erers. The attitude of the populate, of Rhenish Prussia was different. I was evident that even the children had been schooled in the role they must play. In Treves, the largest place occu pied, most of the people malntalneU always a studied air of indifference So far as possible the men in kbak wsre Ignored. Brigadier General Preston Brown the military governor for occupiej territory, has established his beail quarters at Treves, which also hair been mad advanced general head quarters. General Pershing will spend part of his time at Treves. Civil affairs will be directed by Major General Harry Smith. PLOT TO RESTORE KAISER DISCOVERED London. A plot to restore Imperial ism and secure the return of Emperor William has been discovered In Berlin, according to a dispatch from Amster dam. According to tha dispatch, the chief men behind the plot were Field Mar shal Von Mackensen, General Von Born and General Count Sixt Von Arnint. Large sums of money are said to have been placed at the disposal of the leaders by munition makers. The plot collapsed owing to the fact that a secret service agent ovet heard J a telephone conversation. ' Many ar rests have been made In Berlin and other cities, while the government has long lists "of suspects, who had plan ned to seize members of the present government. No direct evidence of William Ho henzollern's connection with the plot has been found, it is said, but it is believed that the outline of the plan was brought to Berlin by two of his suite, who recently went to the Ger man capital tor the ostensible purpose of taking the wife of the former em peror to Amerongen, Holland. Lieutenant Gustav Krupp von Boh len is said to have been in control of the financial arrangements. Field Marslal Von Mackensen is reported to have attempted to indue Field Marsha! Von Hindenburg to join, but the latter refused, saying that he in tended to retire after the demobiliza tion of the army. The whole Prussian court, it is said, was in sympathy with the plotters, and it is said that Prince Von Buelow and Dr. Georg Michaells, former im perial chancellor, had promised to help. The plan was to organize a pro visional government under Field Mar shal Von Mackensen or some other military leader and then urge Wiliam Hohenzollern to return. The state highway commission hs agreed with County Judge Anderson, of Clackamas county, to draw the plans and do the preliminary engin eering for a new bridge across the Willamette river connecting Oregon City, and West Linn. farm " FATTEN CALVES FOR MARKET! Tests Conducted by Bureau of Animal Industry and tht Alabama Exper iment Station. (Prepared by tha United 8tate Popart mnt of Agriculture.) In cattle fcetltng contest conducted by the bureau of animal Industry of the department of agriculture and the Alabama experiment station, covering a period of five years, the fattening of crude calves for market proved profit able In every test made. Cottonseed meitl, cottonseed hulls and alfalfa hay proved to be an excel lent ration and a profitable one for fattening calves. Cnttouseed meal and I , ' v s 4 I 1 ! Stock Raisers Will Find It to Their Advantage to Take More Pains to Find Out Needs of Their Animals and Feed Them Accordingly. Cotti'iisooil hut's proved to tie a good futteiihiij mtliHt for calves for u nhort feedliiK trlo. When fed In conjunction with cot tonseed ineal, corn allnge of rather poor quality produced the same dally gains mi calves lis did eotlonseiMjJmll and cheapened the ctwt. of Hie dully gains.- The substitution of two-tlilnl of the cottonseed meal In a ration with corn did imt prove prolltiihre w hen corn cost 70 cents a bushel and cottonseed uieul f-'O a ton. In one test it was profitable to re place one-third of the cottonseed menl with corn-nnd cob meal, but In a sec ond test nothing was gained by the In troduction of com-rind-cob menl. The first year the calves which received corn-and-cob meitl made slightly larger dnlly gains and sold for more than did the calves which received cottonseed meal as the sole concentrate. The sec ond year the addition of corn to the ration did not Increase the size of the dally gains, nor did the cnlves which received corn sell for any more per pound than the other calves. In a third test 62 high-grade Aberdeen-Angus calves fed on a ration of about three pounds of cottonseed meal, two pounds of cowpea bay and as much cottonseed halls as they would eat made dally gains at a cost of $5.35 per hundred pounds and returned a net profit of 13.50 each. In a fourth experiment 84 calves which were fed for 112 days In the dry lot and then fed 89 days on pasture made good dally gains, but the profits were not aa large as they would hove been if the calves had been sold at tha end of the winter. The gains made during the summer were good and were made cheaply, but the price of calves was so much lower In the sum mer than at the close of winter that the continued feeding Into the summer months was not profitable. NOW f REE OF TUBERCULOSIS Pure-Bred Herds That Have Success fully Passed Annual Tests Are Placed on Accredited List (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) One hundred and seventy-one herds, representing 6,250 cattle, were quail-' fled June 1 for the accredited list of pure-bred herds of cattle free from tu berculosis which the department of ag riculture Is developing to Insure disease-free sources of pure-bred stocks. In order to have bis herd accredited the owner must comply with uniform rules approved by the United States department of agriculture and adopted by nearly all of the states, which re quire thnt every animal pass at least two successful annual tuberculin tests. In addition to the number of herds mentioned, more than 000 others have passed one successful test In prepara tion for accrediting. One of the many advantages of having accredited herds, Which is proving popular with breed ers, is that the owner may make Inter state shipments accompanied by a cer tificate at any time within one year without subjecting the animals to fur ther tuberculin tests. Parasites Are Troublesome. - External parasites are extremely troublesome on live stock. They do most Injury when the animals are low In condition, for strong stock can re sist them better than the weak ones. Hogs Must Have Water. Hogs must have water to drink, and If they cannot get fresh clean water In" the trough or fountain they will drink wherever they find water, re gardless of its condition. pry. jiES1 . , ... Crescent Spice Makes Plum Pud ding Nice I'ri'imii'il from aebi tiM , flrat-puullty whole Kilcci ami ground rarefull) to retain all the mil oral oils Uhiii whlrh Hie m'miuiiiImk vjIiip of apletw tli Mnt. And they cost no more than ordinary spices ask your grocer to supply you. AMBASSADOR DAVIS a Ml lb Mm." John W. Davis, former srmriTcr gen ral of the United 6Ute. recently pp olnted American ambassador to Great Britain. .iAND F.ETUF.N FOR YANKEES PHOYIDED Washington. Four divisions In heir entirety and major units of eight ii her dtvuiuns of the American army . n France have been denlKiiated by 'leimral Pershing for an early return home. These troops with other spe cial units, Goneral March, chief of iinff, announced, total 3451 officers .-.ltd 73.663 men. The complete divisions which will return at an early date, General March said, are th"e S9lh, 76th, S7th and 92d. Important element, of the following divisions to retern us soon as transportation facilities are avail able are the Slat, 84th, 3Sih, loth. 84th, 85th, 86th and 88th. New figures on the Americas army casualties, announced by the chief of staff, showed' a total of 262,698, exclu sive of prisoners. Tha total, which exceeds that made publlo a week ago by 28,000, covers all losses to Novem ber 26. Tha principal change la tha revised list is the addition ot 11,10 men missing in action. The special units to embark toon consist largely of coast artillery bri gades and separate regiments, masy battalions and batteries of anti-aircraft, artillery, engineers, tresch Mor tar batteries and number of other organizations, Including aero squad rons. Orders have been Issued, the chief of staff also said, for the demobiliza tion ot 649,000 men in the camps and cautonments In the United States. Ap proximately 46,000 officers and men In the home camps have already been discharged. By the end of December, Oeneral March Indicated, probably 150,000 to 175,000 members of the ex peditionary forces will have returned lo this couutry. J. D. Farroll, president of the O.-W. R. A N. railroad, has been appointed by Governor Wlthycombe as a member of the state fair board to succeed Mrs. Edith Tozler Weathered. Nineteen horses were burned to death when fire destroyed a barn at the Chemawa Indian school. Several set of harness and 1000 bushels of grain and 60 tons of hay added to the loss. In one check for 880,837.33, benefi ciaries under the estate, of the late Theodore B. Wilcox, of Portland, paid the inheritance tax for that estate. The total valuation of the estate waa 12,892,484. . Total bank deposits In the state ag gregated $226,381,703.44 November 1, according to a statement Issued by Superintendent of Banks Bennett. This Is an Increase from August 81, 1918, of $29,455,286.24. The death of John Olsen, contractor, of Portland, was the only fatality re ported to the Industrial accident com mission out of 430 accidents, reported for the week ending November 28, In clusive. The woman's dormitory at the Eu gene Bible university was destroyed by fire and the matron and 13 girls escaped in their night clothes by cut ting the screens on the sleeping porch and passing through them to safety. V . -x r--7i nfmm WE BUY LIBERT Y BONDS FOR SPdT CASH ANY ISSUE too fiooo $WtNI Semi us your IVon.la by Itt'icU-Ici-thI letter ami rni'ho the tiltflicat market prlco by return mail. VKHTi:ilX KTiK K .M ISOMI 12HO Central ISHj;., Healllr Vn. I !!i it! I ltllHV M TI 'KM A V in:t i Miti. it tun -j.H J. STl'AKT i.i.A. Uiti . 'n "TIIK J IMU.M!:T IIOI M." WAIt ItKVIr W No. 1.1 si .MiAv, ii i:mi:ku 2:1 IKtUOTHY KAI'KJN fi In THK MATING Ol' M MM TXI.A j; Kenned Coinctl)' "AUK waitki:hsi:s hai MOMHV TI'KSIVW in;t lMiti u ao Uini a 1 1IAUUV MOHKV ami Hi: I TV III, I II K In "ALL MAN" llltll I jiUikIk of "HATTIJ SO ton MILLIONS" II WKDNKKDAV Till IIHDAY J.1M Ally I anil K.NII) ItK.NXKTT In "XAl fillTY. N.M'fillTY" (Just One Ioik Uitiuli) FATTY AltltrCKI.i: In "OH! OHM TOH" LYRIC THEATER Frank Relnke has returned from Corvallis, having ben mustered out of the service. He hus boon attend ing the 8. A. T. C. thero. TOO LATH TO CXAHSIFY m 1 Dr. Turner. Eye Specialist, of lir Portland, will be at the Hotel Val Prineville again Saturday, January 4. Consult him. 7t2o LO8T A fountan pen Christmas day on the street in Prineville. Return to Miss Halverson. 7t2p WAITED Position on ranch by ex perienced man and wife. Inquire at this office. 7tfc LOST A two-ycarold white face steer, long yearling heifer, red with, white spots, branded HI on right hip, no ear marks. Information or bringing of the calves will be paid for. Hans Jacobsen, Powell llutte, Oregon. 7tfc TO EXCHANGE A member of my family needing a higher and dryer climate,, I would like to trade the) below described ranch for alfalfa land in Central Ore.: 96Vi acrea in Lorane Valley, Lane county, Ore. 60 acres In cultivation, over halt fine bottom land, balance rolling, but not steep. Good buildings, well fenced, joins county road and free range. . Fine water, telephone, dally mall, abundance of fruit and close to school. C, L. Frost, Lorane, , Oregon. 7t3p FOR SALE I have about 1,200 fine) wool ewes, bred to Lincoln bucks to lamb in March. Will sell any ' number. Address W. M. Wilson, Powell Butte, Ore. 7t3c 7 L