face a CROOK COtTNTT JOCKS At PKIIM'ARY tit, 1010 Crook County Journal BY GCY LAKOIXKTTE Entered at th postofflce at Prinevilla, Oregon, m second-class utter. rCTJUSIlED . EVERT THURSDAY Price $1.00 per year, payable Strictly In advance. In case of change of addreaa please notify ua at once, tiring both old and new address. THIS PAPER REPRESENTED FOR FOREIGfc ADVERTISING BY THE ya, J' -jrr ecNCKAL orncw NEW YORK AND CHICAGO BRANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIES MONTHLY WAR STAMP QUOTAS FIXED FOR TWELFTH DISTRICT The Treasury Department has assigned to the Twelfth Federal Reserve District the following monthly quotas to be raised iu War Savings Stamps during 1919: January $ 4,200.000 February 4,800,000 March 5,400.000 April 6,000,000 Mar 6,00.000 June 7.200.0(H) July 7.800,000 . August 8,400.000 September 9,600.000 October 10.8iW.000' November J2.000.WO December ... 13.2lW.0OO Total $P6.000,000 The total to be raised throughout the country is $1,600,000,000. GOOD FOR OLE! To Ole Hansen, mayor of Seattle, is perhaps due the credit for breaking down the best orgauized and most peneral strike ever attempted in the t nited States. When the labor unions, which in cludes every trade in Seattle from news boy up, or down, started th general strike, the action amounted to revolution, and after a few short j days the fU'htiug mayor announced i that troops would be brought in in sufficient numbers to govern the town, if the strikers did not return lo work. The people knew Hansen, and took his word for it. The strike is over and Hansen is receiving con gratulations, having well earucd them. APPLIES HERE TOO If you are a business man or pro fessional man. a landlord or a ten ant, a laborer or a contractor, a clerk or a banker, a preacher or a teacher, it is your duty to boost for the town and country that feeds and clothes yon. It you cannot boost up a coun try you can leave it. And we Invite right now anyone who feels like he is too good for Malheur county or that Vale and Malheur counties are not good enough to him, we request that oca people tdke the next train for distant points. Any town amounts to just what the peoplewbo live in it make of it. And some of us who are trying to help develop Malheur coun ty's great possibilities do not want to be hampered by a lot of idiotic, thoughtless, old foggy, mossback, damphool knockers. Vale Enterprise that have been necessary for those in charge of the business and other af fairs of the district have been met and successfully passed, and with all due credit to the people in charge, the board of directors, both old and new. the engineer, the attorneys In charge of legal complications that have arisen, and last and perhaps most important of all the bonding house that so ably cared for every emergency that arose, it should be here stated that the district is on as sound a footing as It could possibly be, that there is no project of any kind in the country whose affairs are as well kept up, and where as much value has been received for the money spent as In the Ochoco Project. It would be difficult to find a pro ject anywhere that has been develop ed so nearly as its original plans indi cated, that has had more favorable results from tests made of values and conditions, and of development, snd compare the projects one with anoth er. Land values on like segregations and projects throughout the west have reacti ed and maintained a level averaging $300 per acre, where they have been less favorably Bituated with reference to market ond trans portation facul ties, and while no ef- WITH THE EXCHANGES Mrs. Chas Cannon has returned homefrora I'rlnevtlle, where she was ob lied several weeks ago by the Ill ness of her daughter's family. Doth Mr. and Mrs. Raymond and the child were 111 on her arrival, and the nurse also took to her bed with the Influen xa. All recovered, however, and were doing well when Mrs. Cannon left for home. She reports a very serious epidemic prevailed at that time In the vicinity of Prluevllle. Athena Press. The people of Prusey, with J. L. Sltj at the lead, last wek started a drive for funds to put down a ti'St well at the school house grouiu's for artesian water. This Is a move In the right direction as there is every evidence of success to crown their ef forts. Mother nature has surround ed this territory with conclusive evi dence, every .deep well drilled here has, and yet gives evidence, and the best experts on artesian formation of the U. S. Geological Survey have pro nounced It ni.ise favorable, and the people behind this move are aware of these evidences and are determined to COMMODORE WELLS Comrrodore Walls of the British tavy, who organised the systsm by hlch Amerloan troops were eonvoytd v Europe. iori snouia oe inaae 10 m vaiu.-n t,.8t the matter to a finish Drewsey to this kind of a level at this time. ,,loueor Sun, it is a well established fact that the j - lands will pay a high rate of interest annually on this valuation, and that The Wheeler County Trading Co. there is no contingency that will hold I and H. S. Johnson this week closed a TWOHY BROTHERS' ATTITUDE There should be no confusion of the facts in regard to the relation of the Twohy Brothere Company to the Och oco Project. The contractors were never inter ested in the project or the community Iny more than the contract they held for the construction work, nor should they be expected to burden their binds with the details that are so vi tal to a community such as we have here, for their operations carry them into many localities and many con ditions. On the other hand, the board of directors, the engineering force, the attorneys are all heavily, vitally in terested in the immediate and suc cessful completion of the project as land owners, while the best interests of the contractor may or may not have appeared to rest in that direc tion. Conditions leading up to an open breach are now a matter of history. The facts are that the district sun- porters are those who are locally in-( tor. sled and their interests are the1 Ji .'.crests ol the community. THE ALBEKS VERDICT I: is not surprising that the jury found a verdict of guilty in the case of Henry Albers. The effect of drink on him did not excuse his unpatriotic utterances in the minds of the jurors, and although people are inclined to be harsh with anyone who shows indiscretion in times like these, the jury must be credited with having done what the average American would have done under like conditions. There should be no connection, however, between the convicted man and the firm which bears his name. The milling concern was not on trial, and the very fact that it is one of the largest and best organized concerns In the west, owned by a large num ber of stockholders, is sufficient to command for it the most earnest con sideration at the hands of the public. It is sufficient that the one who is guilty, according to the findings of the court, be punished, and there should be no discrimination against products of the giant mills, which are owned entirely by other people, and which are needed by the country in Its development. the values to their present low level for many months. The few Prinevllle people who have said slighting and uncomplimentary things about the project in months gone by have seen the plan work out with surprising precision just as an nounced, and they will many of them awake to the fact, when it is too late, that the lands are just what they have been claimed to be. that the values are high and that the benefit of the increased valuation is being reaped by people who have come from other cities and states and have been keen enough to realize the development that Is upon us In the Ochoco Project. In this Instance, as resulted in the case of the greatest propagandist In the world, Germany, the loss will fall upon those who have consciously or otherwise been active in the distri bution of sentiment that is unfavor able. There is a community spirit of loy alty that should show everyone inter ested in the town and its resuorces, the folly of this attitude, and that reason, if no other exists, should cause them to apply the old rule we were taught in the school days: "If you cannot speak well of your neighbor, do not speak of him at all." Many of these things could be ap plied to Prinevllle and the surround ing country as well as the project. The town is largely what those who live in it make it In fact the people are the town. We have heard much of the Seat tle spirit, and by the way, did you ever hear a Seattle man knock his town? Also, did you ever hear a Prineville man knock the town which is his home? Did you? We wish the same rule of loyalty could be applied to a that our country is applying to the nation. That if interning the people who are its pronounced enemies, and after due investigation deporting them. Prineville is destined to become the best town in the interior of the state, and this fact is proven by the immense resources of its surrounding country and for no other reason, it is an axiom that is old as the custom of building towns, that the town can become no better than its surround ing country, and in its application the Ochoco Project is Prineville's chief asset. On the project thousands of head of livestock will be fattened annuul'y, deal in Mitchell whereby they take over the stock and building of the well known general merchandise firm of Sasser Brothers of that town. The Wheeler County Trading Co.' takes over all the goods except the gent's furnishings goods,, Including shoes, which Mr. Johnson purchases and will sell in connection with his drug store. It is understood that $ 1,000 has been paid and that the balance will be paid when the invoicing, which Is being done this week, is completed. The firm of Sasser Brothers, which has been operating In Mitchell for the last few years, and which Is dissolved by this sale, consisted of County Clerk Scott Sasser and Elmer Sasser. It is reported that Elmer Sasser will go to farming and has already opened negotiations for a farm over In the John Day Basin region. Mitchell Sentinel. Andrew Hansen, owner of the South Pole mine at the head of Crack er Creek and Rock Cftek, west o! Hainc-, reports a hesvy snowfall in the mountains, according to the Ba ker Democrat. Mr. H.imn naa spent nearly every winter ut the mine for th past 20 years and hfl aayj the aver age winter fall of snow Is five feet. When he left the min Saturday the snow measured five feet in depth and since then there must hav- fallen two feet more, making seven feet in all. This report should dispel the thought of irrigation shortage next year and with this month and next to draw on, and it is nothing unusual to have heavy snowfalls during these months, there will be plenty of snow in the mountains to feed all the streams. In 1900. Mr. Hansen savs. snow community,' fell to a depth of nine feet at the mine the deepest in 31 years. Haines Re cord. w. a. s. Umatilla county will vote on a $1,050,000 road bond Issue in the near future at a special election. Pe titions containing more than 1,000 names have been filed with County Clerk Brown calling for the special election to vote on Umatilla county's first big good roads program. The number required to call the election was 844. Although only about half the petitions were handed in by Sat urday night, the number of county voters who had signified their de- fflPOP SHIPMENTS TO SHOW CIS GAIN WnHnston. American troop ship ments from France villi be Increased to ltiO.000 during February. Chief of Staff March auuounccd. This Is sn Increase of 60.000 over January. Further to increase the shipments, General March has ordered conversion if 51 cargo vessels Into transports. In addition. It Is expected that several German ships will be added soon to he fleet bringing horns the Yanks, according to cables from Chairman Hurley of the shipping board. Troops shipped from France up to February 1 numbered 236,824, March stated. Demobilization In this country Is characterized as being on the "home stretch." Total discharges to date number 1.100.850, Including 67,038 officers and 1.033,812 enlisted men. Demobilization orders number 1.443,- 000. Including men already discharged. - The number of American soldiers dilsslng In action has been cut from approximately 10.004 to 7582, and re ports from General Pershing show that (torn 100 to 200 men a day previously reported missing are being accounted for. START the new year right, by heating your bath and bed rooms ji with a Majestic Electrical Heater. No litter or dirt, and absolutely safe to operate. Price of a 600 watt Heater, $9.00. Cost of operation $3.00 per month flat rate. 1 ,000 watt Heater $ 1 2.50, cost of operation $5.00 per month. 1,700 watt Healer $17.50, cost of operation $7.50 per month. Call and be convinced of what they will do, as we use no wood for heating our office. Come and see for yourself. Des Chutes Power Co. SENATE REFORM PROMISED Republicans Vote to Abolish Seniority Rights Evil. Washington. Republicans of the senate voted in conference to abolish some of the long-standing seniority rights In the organization of commit tees when they take control of the senate after March 4. Under the rules as they will be amended no senator will be permitted to become a member of more than two of the 10 principal standing commit tees and the chairmen of these com mittees may not be on any conference committee upon a bill reported by an other committee without the recom mendation of the majority members of the committee which had the bill la charge. A resolution recommending that after March 4 no senate committee shall be composed of mors than 17 members also was adopted. sire to nave mis question nut to a and the tribute in cash which these ilot,e,,ha(1 exceeded tne thousand mark lands will pay to Prinevilla people and business houses will be large an nually. Many fine homes will be, establish ed where but few and those not pros perous, have been. A bright, prosperous, thriving city will be the lot of Prineville, and the coming of bigger and better days will rest to a great eilent with the people of the town themselves. Petitioners report much enthusiasm in every section of the county over the road program and a heavy major ity for the bonds is generally predict ed. The date of the election will be set at the next meeting of the county court, Wednesday. Tribune. BE A THOROUGHBRED For Borne reason that is not alto gether clear, there has developed a sentiment in some quarters to criti cize the Ochoco Project, and to ques tion the value of the lands and the soundness of the project that is hard to understand and. for which there exists no excuse. The problems that have confronted the project, and the various decisions s Condition of fall-sown wheat in Wasco county Is better at this time than for the last three years, accord- Think it over ana insieaa of being ing to local observers. Not only did indifferent to the resources and won-1 tne late fall rains give the crop a derful development that Is at hand, I good start, but the comparatively get into the game, boost for the lrri- mild w'ntei-, with the heavy rainfall gation project, put your shoulder to'of tne ,ast few weeks, has been fav the wheel, make the project's enemies I orab,e to the condition of the crop, your enemies and remember that the I Be(ore the cold weather halted the success of the project means the sue- j growth of the wheat, reports from cess and prosperity of this commun-, many 8ections of the country indleat ity. ed that the stand was unusually I heavy and that the wheat had made I an excellent start. Frost left the 10 head of cattle belonging to the ground some time ago and the soil Fairview Stock Farm Co.. of Prine ville, that have been fed this winter by Fred Andrews, were shipped to Kansas City Thursday. Kidwell & Caswell of Portland, were the pur chasers. Nine carloads of cattle from the Koirvie'w Stock Farm were re ceived hv Mr. Andrews yesterday for county will be exceptionally good reeaig. Kcno News. The Dalles Optimist. is reported to be In good condition to receive the maximum benefit from the moisture. While the maturing of the crop will depend to a considerable extent upon weather conditions dur ing the coming summer, the present indications are that the crop in this Archangel Costs Yanks 409 of 492S. Washington. Total casualties in tbe American forces In the Archangel rsgtoa of Russia up to and including January 81,. were 180 killed, died ef wounds, sickness or from other cause, or missing in action, and 229 wounded or injured, making a total casualty list of 409 out of a force that num bered 4925. Women of Indiana Win Vote Indianapolis. The legislature pass ed a bill giving women the right to vote for presidential electors. THE MARKETS Portland Barley Standard feed, $46 per toa. Cora Whole, $67069; cracked, $89 071. Hay Timothy, $3032 person; al falfa, $26.50. Butter Creamery, 45c per pound. Eggs Ranch, 45c per dozen. Poultry Hens, 18032c; roosters, 18c; turkeys, 42c. Seattle Hay Eastern Washington timothy, $40 par ton; alfalfa, $32 per ton. Butter Creamery, BOc. Eggs Ranch, 45c. Potatoes $1.60 1.75 per hundred. Poultry Hens, heavy dressed, 40c; light, 28c; live, 8637c; springs, dressed, 40c; ducks, live, 8738o; dressed, 8641c; geese, live, !334c; dressed, 38c; turkeys, dressed, 45 48c. 13 Dollars 13 Cents When Swift & Company paid, say, 13 dollar per hun dredweight for live beef cattle last year, the profit was only 13 cents! In other words, if we had paid $13.13, we would have made no profit Or, if we had received a quarter of a cent per pound less for dressed beef we would have made no profit It is doubtful whether any other business is run on so close a margin of profit This is bringing the producer and the consumer pretty close together which should be the object of any industry turning raw material into a useful form. This remarkable showing is due to enormous volume, perfected facilities (packing plants strategically located, branch houses, refrigerator cars, etc.), and an army of men and women chosen and trained to do their special work. This, and many other points of interest, are found in the Swift & Company Year Book for 1919, just published which is brought out for the public as well as for the 25,000 Swift & Company shareholders. The Year Book also represents the packer's side of the Federal Trade Commission investigation, upon which Congress is asked to base action against the industry. Many who have never heard the packer's side are .sending for the Year Book. Would you like one ? Merely mail your name and address to the Chicago office and the book will come to you. Address Swift & Company Union Stock Yards, Chicago The Journal does Modern Printing on SHort Notice