Crook County journal. (Prineville, Or.) 189?-1921, January 16, 1919, Page Page 5, Image 5

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    JAM'AltY Ml,
CBOOK COUNTY JOURNAL
PSe
OREGON NEWS NOTES
OF GEKERAUNTHEST
Principal Events of the Week
Briefly Sketched for Infor
mation of Ojr Ruailer. i
Albany mot Ion pli'tiit' thestera
have closed voluntarily lo remain
limed until all Influenza iIuiik'T In
paused,
Tim Warm Ppi'lms InH'iillmi proj
ect, wtilih I alre-udy on fair way In
development, cunning h bin boom
at Vala.
Aiiroxlinnlly 125 men employed at
thn Ht. Helena Hhlihiillding cum
limn y'n yard at St. Helens are oul on
etrlk.
I'urtlaud will open Ita fl rut open air
arhixil on Junuary 27. II will be tlie
only school of Ita kind la Oregon and
In Washington.
Joseph Mi-Cord, a well known iiuknr
enunty man, who had bn living on
bla ranch near Hock creek, cornmltli-d
suicide by taking strychnine.
Tlia ministers of Albany adopted a
resolution voluntarily cloning all of
U churches of Albany to all meet
Una until danger truin Influoiua la
past.
Tha J. II. Chambers mill at Cottage
Grove la now gutting out several cars
of 118 Umbers to be shipped to
Italy. The timbers are to to 6u feet
In length.
Delegate from Oregon, Washington
and California will attend thn Oregon
Btat llotul Men's association conven
tlon which will njeti In Portland Mon
day, January 20.
Another influenza wave haa hit
Klamath Ka.lla. Tba ban which waa
placed on tha city early In October
haa been ralin-d only a abort time, but
the disease- aKaln la spreading.
Tim Columbia river between Tha
Callus and Hood Hlver waa complete
ly closed luiat week with lea which
stretched from abora to ahora. Auto
mobiles crossed In safety ovar tha
fromu aurfaca.
Work u tha Eugene l.orane rnad,
which la one of tha big road iroJicta
planned by the l.aue county court for
J9ltt. haa been started and a crew of
tan baa begun to clear tba rlukt of
way at the Kugene and.
Mra. Eiiiiiiullne Elizabeth Galloway,
wlfo of former Circuit Judge William
Uallnway, died at her home In Balem
after an Illness uf several montha.
Mra. Galloway waa long iduutlflad
with public life In Orugon.
Fraternities and sororities of the
Oregon Agricultural college have
formed a corporation for the purpoaa
of purchasing fooda and othor eup
pllea and for systymatlzlng operation
of tha varloua chapter houses.
Dlatrlct Attorney R. W. Swagler
waa ahot three tlmaa, but not seriously
wounded, by John ilanlon, of Jordan
Valley, aa he waa amending tha stalr
way In tha courthouae la Vale. Han
Ion la In jail charged with aaaault
with Intent to kill.
In a report to tha atate land board,
Attorney-General Brown goea at length
lato tha land fraud situation In the
atata and declare that he will seek
16000 from the legislature to further
prosecute tha Paclfio Livestock caae,
hut will attempt no other prosecutions.
Matilda Whittle, an Indian woman,
who became famoua during the Modoc
war In 1173, when aha waa the trusted
sBasng-er of the peace commiaalon
lad carried message to and from tba
hostile Indiana In the lava, bade, died
at Klamath Falla. She waa 80 years
f age.
That Indiana from Umatilla reser
vation bav done their part In serving
the country In the war la ahown by
the record of mora than SO who have
bean doing their duty In Prance and
la tha training camps. The Indiana
responded willingly whan called to tha
service.
After sitting for several daya In
front of a houae at Dillon, eaat of The
Dallas, apparently watching pausing
tralna, the frozen body of an aged
' aegro, believed to be Joseph Mullen,
waa found. It la believed be started
bt walk te The Dallea when be waa
vercoane by the cold.
Early extension of tha Strahorn
railroad from ita present terminal at
Dairy, 20 miles eaat of Klamath Falls,
U Bonanza, waa Indicated at a meet
ing of the residents of that section.
Between 110,009 and $12,000 of the
118,000 necessary to assure this con
struction waa pledged. ,
Stockmen of Waaco county have
agreed to support tb effort to be
aiade at this session of the legislature
to onset a law providing for co-opera-tloa
with tbs federal government In
checking tha predatory animal peat
by matching the appropriation of the
United States for this purpose.
The death house at the state peni
tentiary at Salem, where more than a
aoore of men have been shot through
the traps Into eternity, Is to be chang
ed Into a kitchen, and fully 300 con
Tlots will be served their food cafe
teria style, Instead of tha present
"reach and grab" system which pre
vails, according to plans being workod
out bow by !, mien Stevens.
Seven Hood niver valley nulla,
headed by the Mitchells I'olut Lum
ber company, with a cut of 8,r,(m,(ioo,
last year turned out 11.575,000 feet of
lumber. With thn Z4.0(SO.ono feet pro
(luced by the Oregon Lumber com
puny a mill at line, the valley's total
lumber output for 1918 readied 30,
647,000 feet.
Tha Crooked rtlver road, for the
construction of which the slate and
Crook county each appropriated I!I6,
000 recently, Is now being surveyed
uml construction will probubly begin
within 90 days. This thoroughfare
will be one of tint mi.st Important pout
rouils aa well as one of the best scenic
roads In the county.
The AHtorla sanitary and reclama
tion commliislon baa sold I200,0i0 In
bonds to Morris Bros., of rortluud.
The money Is to be used for the con
struction or a hulHii-nd along the third
reclamation district, from the Clatsop
mill to Thirty seventh street, and the
entire district la to be filled wlti aand
pumped from the river.
Merger of the Home telephone sys
tem In Portland with that of the Pa
cific Htatea system waa authorized In
the federal court when a dot-roe modi
fying the decree of March 26, 1914,
waa filed. The Pacific Htatea com
pany Is permitted to acquire tliu Home
exchariKes In Portland, Albany, Cor-
vallls and Oregon City.
Seven standard Russell road graders
with scarifying attachments were last
week ordered by the Lane county
court and after their arrival will be
distributed about the county for road
maintenance work. These are con
sidered to be valuable additions to
the already extensive road building
equipment of Lane county.
At a conference between Portland
city officials and members of the
school board a 'lightening of quaran
tine regulations against Spanish In
fluenza waa decreed. Reports at the
meeting ahowed a considerable In
crease of new caaea, and It waa said
that alnc October 13 last 11,6:16 cases
and 918 deaths have been reported.
Judge Anderson, of Baker county
circuit court, baa ruled that the city
authorities of La Grande were within
their legal rights when they ordered
the moving pictures to close during
the Influenza epidemic. The city or
dered them cloned, and the theater
managers determined to take the mat
ter to the courts for a test decision.
About 20 members of the Oregon
military police who now are on duty
are taking a chance at aecurlng their
salary, It haa developed. The defi
ciency appropriation made by the
emergency board to cover the ex
penses of that organization Inpaed on
January 1, and consequently the mem
bers of the force are at the mercy of
the legislature.
The Dallas undertakers report that
there were (5 deatba from Influenza
In that city during the last three
montha of 1918. A heavy toll haa
been taken by tha second wave of the
epidemic. Schools, libraries, pool
hills, theatera, churches, lodges and
libraries have been closed; public
funerala are forbidden, and all housea
where tha dlaeaae exists are quaran
tined. A deal of considerable magnitude
waa closed at Sutherlin last week,
when the Sutherlin Inn, of which
Frank B. Walt Is the principal owner,
was sold to the Seventh Day Adven
tlst people of southern Oregon. The
hotel waa built four years ago at a
cost of 130.000. Th object of the
Adventlst people la to establish an
academy la the building and move
their school at Loran to Sutherlin.
Secretary of the Interior Lane indi
cated in a speech before members of
th house recently that be had adopt
ed Representative Slnuott'a - sugges
tion of having his requested appro
priation of $100,000,000 for reclama
tion purposea Incorporated In the sun
dry civil bill to insure action In this
congresa. If this appropriation la
granted Representative Sinnott will
aeek to have two new Irrigation proj
acta Initiated la Oregon.
With even nurses and assistants at
some of the hospitals becoming ill
tram influenza, th situation at Salem
haa becom ao aerlous that city au
thorities bav intimated that the al
ready tight ban may b drawn even
tighter unless radical ateps are taken
to preserve the regulations. It Is
even possible that th prohibitory
measures may be extended to apply to
all but absolutely essential businesses,
such as meat markets, groceries and
drug stores, and that other merchand
ising establishments will be ordered
closed. It Is estimated there are fully
1000 caaes of th disease In th otty.
Jaokson oounty won the $5 prise
In th thrift campaign conducted by
th achool children of th state during
last year under th ausplcee of the
Oregon Bankers' association, th Ore
gen Stat Tsachera' association, tb
Oregoa department of education, tb
United States department ef agrioul
tur and the Oregon Agricultural col
lege through th beys' and girls' olub
work department Th work has prov
ed so suooesaful that tb Oregon Bank
ers' association will aot only again
offer $50 in oash to th county making
th best showing, but has voted $100
for th printing of pupils' record
books. .
VICTOR L. BERGE3
- a - y
It
sj,iMia - V . -m.
-.'f I --vwv, "W
' : -ai.u -i, . t
Victor L. Berger, Socialist congrsaa-man-elect
from Wisconsin, who was
convicted under th espionage law.
BOLSiiEVIKI START
RIOT AT SEATTLE
Seattle, Wash. Openly preaching
sedition and defying the police when
ordered to disperse, 2000 men, at an
open air Bolshevik meeting at Fourth
.avenue and Virginia street, precipitat
ed a riot at 3:30 Sunday afternoon
that required more than 100 police
men, soldiers and sailors to quell.
' Thirteen were arrested snd many
!mor'were aeen leaving the scene of
the trouble with minor wounds from
policemen's clubs and soldiers' flats.
Tha meetlag waa cloaed by the po
lice when the apeaknra urged a gen
. eral strike In all Industries and th
tying up of shipping to prevent the
shipment of suppliea to Siberia for
th maintenance of the United States
' and other armies in the field there.
: Leaflets were passed out among the
audience urging men la the uniform
of the United States to refuse to serve
t their country In the event they were
; ordered to Siberia or Russia to inter
far with the Bolshevik movement
NINE MORE STATES RATIFY
Drys In Congreaa Celebrate Greatest
Prohibition Week.
Washington. Jubilant over the re
aulta of "tha greatest prohibition week
In history," drys la congress predict
that another week would see th dry
amendment a part of th federal con
stitution. In th last week Bin states bav
ratified the amendment, bringing the
total to 24.
In tha neit week 12 more, enough
for final ratification, are expected to
take affirmative action, and by the
end of thia month 41, and poaaibly 43,
state legislatures will ratify It drya
antlolpate.
The slates which ratified last week
are: Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, West
Virginia, Maine, Michigan, Ohio, Okla
homa and Tennessee.
The senates of California and Illi
nois also paased the amendment
Clemenceau te Rule at Peac Meeting,'
Paris. Georges Clemenceau, pre
mier of France, will be the permanent
president of the interallied peace con
ference aa a mark of proper tribute
to the premier of the country la which
th conference la held. President Wil
son aad the American delegates have
agreed to his appointment which la
by common consent of all th dele
gate. Attorney-General Gregory Realgna.
Washington. Thomaa Watt Greg
ory, attorney-general of the United
States sine 1914, has resigned be
cause of "pecuniary responsibilities,''
and will return to the practice of law.
President Wilson has agreed te his
retirement next March 4.
THE MARKET
Portland
Oats No. I whit feed, $13 per ten.
Barley Standard feed, $4 par ton.
Corn Whole, !87S; cracked, 171
7I.
Hay Timothy, (30011 per ta; al
falfa, $27.1.
Butter Creamery, 17c per pound. .
Bggs Raaoh, Tic per doiea.
Potatoes $1 per hundred.
Poultry Haas, 2880o; aprtags,
10 ; roosters, 23c; ducks, lOo; geese,
lOOKe; turkeys, 40o.
Seattle -I
Hay Eastern Washington timothy
I3t per ton; alfalfa, $34 per toa.
Butter Creamery, 66o. . j
Eggs Ranch, 71c per doiea.
Pwwltry Hens, 30(232o; springs;;
!lo; roosters, 23e; duoks, lOo; geae,
Ho; turkeys, 44047c.
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CoDVriaht lllf
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COLONEL ROOSEVELT
Ex-Prealdent Theodora Roosevelt,
who died unexpectedly at hla horn In
Oyater Bay, N. Sunday night.'
AMERICANS DRIVE
BACK BOLSHEVISTS
With thn Allied Army of th Dvina.
American troops fighting desperate
ly near Kadish have driven back Bol
shevist troops which made an advance
there. Th Bolshevists also launched
attacks on the Onega sector and bom
barded the allied front The Ameri
cans came into battle along the Petro
grad road and in the frozen swamps
that border it The battle was fought
in snow from two to four feet in depth.
American forces captured Kadish
after a display of gallantry that evok
ed the admiration of th allied com
manders. Special car has been taken
of th American wounded. There
wer some casualties but thay war
small In comparison U those inflicted
upon th enemy.
The enemy did aot occupy Kadiab
because tb barrage fir from th
Americana mad th place untenable.
Shells falling on the frossn ground
spread their sones of destruction twice
aa far as they would under normal
conditions.
When voters write ou the ballot at
the general election next month the
name of their choice for justice of the
supreme court to fill the vacancy
caused by the death ot Justice Moore
they should also make a cross in the
little square at the left ot the name.
This wfll Insure the validity ot the
rote cast although the law does not
require the making of the cross. At
torney General Brown has passed on
this point in an opinion to Gilbert
Hedges, district attorney at Oregon
Cltl, .
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t"!"",;"'! M,!.. tmk yy ,i; v: : ; 1 V
SAY, youll have a streak of smoheluck that'll
put pep-in-your-smokemotor, all right, if you'll
ring-in with a jimmy pipe or cigarette papers and
nail some Prince Albert for packing I
Just between ourselves, you
never will wise-up to high-spot-smoke-joy
until you can call a pipe
by its first name, then, to hit the
peak-of-pleasure you land square
on that two-fisted -man -tobacco,
Prince Albert !
Well, sir, youll be so all-fired
happy youH want to get a photo
graph of yourself breezing up the
pike with your smokethrottle wide
open I Talk about smoke-sport I
Quality makes Prince Albert so
Yob bay Princ A Ibmrt erywftfv tobacco i tot J. Topmy two bagi,
tidy rmj tint, handtomm momnd and half oound tin hamidorwantl
that clamay, practicai pound eryttal gtmma humidor with wpongm
wil'iw top that hpt tha tobacco in racA perfect condition.
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C
ir
For Quick, Profitable Returns, Ship Your
FURS
TO NEAREST MARKET
II. LIEDES & CO,
PORTLAND, OREGON
MUSKRAT, SKUNK, COYOTE, WILDCAT
Before you make another shipment
WRITE TODAY FOR BIG PRICE LIST Established 55 Tears
H. L I E B E S AND COMPANY
Dept. F 140-151 Broadway, Llebes' Bldg., PORTLAND, OREGON
ii
I.
ii
OCHOCo" REALTY
COMPANY
Has some very attractive bar
gains In farms on its books and
would be glad to have you in
vestigate some of these buys.
There is also a chance for a
trade for some good Oregon and
Washington property for Och
oco District lands. Come In
anc; see ns about it. if you are
thinking of selling your place
we would like to list It. We
make no charge for advertising
your place unless we sell. Our
charges are on a commission
basis and are very fair.
, t i
appealing all along the smoke lino.
Men who never before could
smoke a pipe and men who've
smoked pipes for years all testify
to the delight it hands out! P. A.
can't bite or parch! Both are
cut out by our exclusive patented
process 1
Right now while the going's
good you get out your old jimmy
pipe or the papers and land oa
some P. A. for what ails your
particular smokeappetite I
World's Ijargest and Foremost Fur
Establishment
PAYS HIGHEST PRICES because
it is a manufacturing concern.
Furs shipped to us are made up by
us. We pay no commissions the
shipper gets the middle-man's
profit. We buy all furs, but par
ticularly want