Tlll'IlHDAY, OCTOHEB SI. lOM CROOK COUNTY JOURNAL Page I PUBLIC H HOOL NOT KM 4 Teachers and students of the lo cal schoola are very much elated over tha ahowlnc mada at tha Inter-State Pair. Tha exhibit waa tha largest In several years. Nearly two-thirds of the atudnnts entered soma work, and nesrly a hundred dollars In pris es waa carried off. ' .. Principal Babeock announces that be Is planning to tske up tha Indus trial Club work under the directing of O. A. 0. next sprlnf , speaker at assembly. ' , The se?enih and eighth grade boy hav 'purchased a football and are letting a lot of healthy exercise: as result The new library books have arrlr ad and as soon aa they are listed they . will be placed on the shelves. Mrs. Cull was absent Monday mor ning, and Mrs. llsbcock took hue place In teaching. The boy'a basement will be open during the bad weather for play. Sawdust baa been put on the floor to protect the commit In rase of falU. Vloliit Holloway anrollud In the seventh grade thla week. Kdniund Campbell was a new stu dent In the eighth grade thla week. The seventh H cliiss now haa a to tal enrollment of 22, about the larg est class In the building. More boys ride bicycles to school now than ever before. Ten were put In the basement last week on acount Of bad weather. t A strsw vote wss hold In the pub lic school yesterday In the four high est gradaa. The result was: tth grade: lUirding 17. Cox 3; th grade, Harding 10, Cox 10; 7th grade, Harding 19. Cox 11; Sta grade, Hurdlng 10 fox ;Total, Hnr ding 6, Cox 29. Mrs. Vina Douihlt left Prlnevllle Tuesday morning after a visit in this Vicinity with relatives. Her bus bund was formerly tha edltorpf tha Ochoco Review, now the Call, and until recently the editor of The Dal les Tlmea-Mouiitnlnecr. She bus disposed of her home In The Dalles, and will go to Eugene, where her daughter, who was a nurse In Franca la doing speclul work In the Univer sity. The dance in Redmond, with music by Wilson George orchestra, was tha mocca for many Prlnevllle, people lust Saturday night. Among those who mmle the trip were Ilaiel Sulli van, Carey Foster, Dolly Hodgoa, Floyd Fesslor. Mi Klnley Kane, Byrl Davis, Blanche Shipp, Mrs. Durand, . Ilsrnld Prose, Tona Cornett, Ogdon Mills. Mr. and Mrs. Sylvan Michel, Laura Nelson, Kdlth Wonderly, Weu dll Fuller, Huel Cook, Albert Bird aung, John Cyrus, Prentice PlUor and Charles Wyman. OLD DISPATCH RIDKK 1IKKK Chas. If. Dodd, an implement deal, er of Portland, spent Tuesday fn Prlnevllle on a business trip. Mr. Dodd Is an old pioneer of Ore gon, having lived In this state 67 years. Sixty years ago he rode into Itbla Central Oregon country with dispatches for soldiers on the Ochoco nd has many Interesting tales to tell of the early days of the state. CARD OK THANKS We wish to extend our thanks to 'our friends for the sympathy and as sistance extended to us In our recent bereavement . Mrs. J. M. Hayes, Orvllle Hayes, Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes W. It Hayea, . Edward Hayea. Peruvian Hes of Dignity. T; e mayor "f the miiih Mchi town In Peril feels that It Ik lii"iiinlient upon him,' In order to make 'Up proper dis play of offl'tlll dignity, to be aecoin panted by a hand of pipers whenever he appears on tiny tnt occasion. These musicians hiii'e Instrument which consist of u series of reedi atrung together and make a weird music. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR SALE or exchang e N e w Dodge touring car, run 500 miles. Extra tire and accoutrements. Inquire Journal office. 6tfc FOR RENT FurnlBhed room on ground floor, one block from Main Street, $2.00 per week. In- ... quire Journal office. , tf. MARRIED COUPLE wanti steady : work for winter and aummer, on ; sheep ranch. Call at Journal of fice. -TP. LOST Bay saddle horse, branded "F" on left shoulder, and two lit tle black mules branded "49" on loft stifle. Lost at Charles Hous ton ranch a month ago. Notify W. K. McCornmck, Deschutes, Or. t4p OREGON NEWS NOTES OF GENERAL INTEREST Principal Events of the Week Briefly Sketched for Infor mation of Our Readers. Examinations tor appointment to West Point will be held In Salem De cember 17. Talent haa voted S4&0.000 bonds to build a reservoir on Emigrant creek, east of Ashland. The mills of Cottage Orovt report they are now getting all the cara they can possibly use. Tha stste supreme court will begin Its atra Oregon session at Pendle ton on October 16. Apple growers In Hood River valley celebrated Columbus dsy by making a record pick of apples. A Harney county health association has been formed to direct the work of the community nurse. Roy B. Buodgrasa of Lebanon has died from Injuries received when his borsa fell on the pavement. The first carload of apples has been shipped from Btanfitld. The crop will not be so good as' estimated. Sheriff La Bare of Columbia county has seised a still within five blocks of the courthouse at St. Helens. Ons hundred and eighty teachers at tended the opening session of tba Ba ker county teachers' Institute. Application to tha state land board for loans now exceed tha available school funds by more than $150,000. The Eugene Cha.ober of Commerce will raise a fund of llO.Ouu for tbe de velopment of Eugene and Lan couuty. A. B. Cooper or Hood River has har vested a fine yield of sorghum stalks, which hs will concert luto molasses. Chief Justice McBrlds of the su preme court baa celebrated tbe fiftieth anniversary of bis admission to tbe bar. Carl Onedks of Grants Pass haa died from Injuries received when he was struck by a passeuger trslu. He was 77 years old. A new 120.000 bakery has been open ed at Corvallla. It Is of concrete throughout, with hardwood floors and an up-to-date oven. Tbe city of Myrtle Point will protect Ita water supply by the purchase of the land at the headwaters of tbe creek from which It Is taken. The North Pacific Coast conference of the Christian and Missionary Alli ance will be held at Hood River from October 2 to October 29. Douglaa county Is tbe only prune district In tbe state that baa not re ported losses of this year's crop rang ing from 2G to 60 per cent Fourteen claims were filed for the $750 offered by the city of Pendleton and Umatilla county for the capture of John Laffebean, alias Jack Rsthis. Coos county, whose treasury waa In creased nearly half, a million dollars this year by the settlement of tbe for feited' land grant, la now out of debt. No truce hua been found of Joseph Rohrer, a hunter who is lost In the thickly-timbered district on the North Umpqua river, 4U miles east of Rose burg. Harney county stock men organised last week for co-operation In market- : Ing, purchase of supplies, range pres ervation and the Issuance of a brand book. With the shutting down of the large sawmills nearby u-d the shortage of freight cars, a fuel famine may result In Eugene this winter, according to wood dealera. The city of Reedsport has aold Ita municipal water bonds at $79 on the $100. Thla will make possible the com pletion of the water system by the first of the year The Phei company, which operatea a large plant In Sulem and ahlpa Its producta to almost every aectlon of tha world, haa Increased Ita capital stock to $4,000,000. Thursday, Friday and Saturday have been set for the datea of the an nual land products show to be conduct ed In Roseburg under the supervision of the farm bureau office. One of the oldeat O. A. R. veterans In the state and the oldest man In Umatilla county, John Ourdane, 97, died at his home In Pendleton follow ing several, months of 111 health. Governor' Olcott has honored extra dition papers In the case of Olenn T. Aldrlch, who Is wanted at Chicago to answer the charge of passing worth less checks to t.he amount of $10,000. Recelpta of the Astoria postoffice during the quarter ending September :!0 were $11000 greater than for the corresponding period laat year. Sav ings deposits showed a gain of $8000. Discovery at Horse Butte, nine miles southeast of Bend, of a naturally heat ed cave, apparently drawing warmth from a subterranean volcanlo aource, vrh reported by C. A. Yarnetl and H. '). Elde, Bend fuel dealers. Prune drying In Linn county closed :it- week and it Is now possible 'to lve a fair estimate of the loss to the -op from the continuous showers of he last month. The loss In the county - estimated at one-third of tba entire up. . . ' Postmasters bars been appointed la Oregon aa follows: Maggie L. Demans, Barnea, Crook county; Bella M. Ladd, Oeneva, Jefferson county; Sidney E. Wast, Lower Bridge, Deschutes coun ty. As a result of a general force re duction order Issued by tha Souther Pacific company, 82 railroad employes have lost their positions In various departments of tba service In Kose burg. Tha Princeton university debating team, which la coming weat to meet the teams of Washington and Califor nia, haa asked for a debate with tbe University of Oregon during Christ mas holidays. Tbe Bend commercial Club Imme diately will file a complaint with tha state public service commission aa tbe first step In a campaign to aecura rail road construction . to connect Bend wltb Burns and Crane. Work on the Hood River end of tha Mount Hood loop highway, for which bids have already been called, will be delayed until later and, instead, Improvement of the route between Bandy and Zlg Zag will ba atarted at once, One result of the grsnd Jury Investi gation of the building of the new schoolhousa at Bay City, Tillamook county, la the arrest Of Henry Butler, a former school director, on the charge of receiving $400 from one of tbe con-1 tractors. 1 At least $50,000 will be apent by the Oregon Orowers' Co-operative associa tion during the coming year In ad vertising to tba world tbe merits of Oregon prunes. The Oregon product will be advertised under tba name of "Mlatland." The seventy second session of tbe Congregational conference of Oregon and the annual meeting of tbe Wo man's Home Missionary Union and tbe Oregon braoch of tba Woman's Board of Miaalons for the Pacific Coast met In Forest Orova. Edward Heard and Seth Hart of Haines have filed application with the slate engineer for permlaaion to appro priate water from Rock Creek lake reservoir, for a supplemental supply for the Irrigation of several hundred seres of Isnd In Baker county. Hood River apple growers are mak ing fair progress In harvesting their crop despite unfavorable weather con ditions. The total yield of the season Is now estimated at 1,200.000 boxes, or 60 per cent thst of laat year. Tbe crop will be about 60 per cent New towns. Oregon Agricultural college hens bsve abided another victory to their credit by winning first place In the all-northwest egg-laying contest con ducted at tbe Washington State col lege at Pullman, according to Profes sor Drydea, In charge of poultry hus bandry. Hundred of thousands of acrea of lodge polo and jack pine In central Oregon, valueless for timber, may be come an Important industrial resource. Experiments conducted under the direction of John Steldl of Bend and Dr, TJ. C. Coe of Portland havo dem onatrated that a good grade of com mercially valuable paper can be manu factured from the pine. The Langells valley Irrigation dis trict haa made application to the Irri gation securities commission for the certification of $200,000 of a bond Is sue af $900,000 which waa voted for development of the project. Thia dis trict Includes an Irrigable area of ap proximately 20,500 acrea and Is located In tbe upper part of Lost River valley near the town of Langells Valley In Klamath county. This week Is "buy a note aecured by livestock" week among the bankers of the state, according to announce ment of C. D. Rorer, chairman of the agricultural committee of the Oregon Bankers' association. Mr. Rorer sent out a bulletin to the members of the association calling attention to this campaign, which Is planned by the agricultural comml'.tee In order to help tha livestock situation. , Tha application of Fort Klamath Meadowa company of Fort Klamath covering tha appropriation of lit second-feet of the watera of Four-Mile creek, Sevan-Mile creek and Ann creek, tributaries of Upper Klamath land, for the Irrigation of 931S acres of land has been approved by Percy A. Cupper, state engineer. It la esti mated that tha construction work will cost approximately $240,000. . Immediate opening of the Tillamook highway near Wlllamlna, which Her bert Nunn, state highway engineer, in a communication aent recently to the Oregon public service commission, alleged was In almost Impassable con dition because of operationa of tha Wlllamlna Grand Ronde Railroad company, waa directed In a letter pre pared by Fred O. Buchtel, chairman oi tha public aervlce commission and di rected to officials of tha railway. The Oregon State Chamber of Com merce haa announced that It has aa cured the aervlcea of J. W. Brewer as field aecretary and a campaign la to be atarted Immediately for the organ ising of farm clubs throughout thi state. George Quayle, general secre tary of the chamber, reported that Mr. Brewer'a work will pre-eminently bl to encourage land settlement, to gat people on the land and to encouragi those now on the land to stay there A A CITIZEN OP OREGON YOU NEED THE PORT OF PORTLAND If yow owned store yow coo Id aot snake a bis; aaceea aniens jroar business me thods 'were a modem m your competitor's, mire Orrgoa develops her shipping fa cilities she cannot expect to art her share of the world's basineaa. It rnrts with the clUxena of thla state whether Oregon shall develop ber wonderful resource and reach oat for bigger market, or remain practically aa Inland state. .. , J ; j To become real port, a 80-foot channel mast be dredged ha the Colombia and Willamette Rivera from Portland to the Pacific Ocean. Thla will enable fanners', stockmen and lumbermen la the Interior of the state to reach the market of the world at a lower freight rate and a greater profit to themselves, : The taxing and bonding power to make theae Improvements can be granted the Port of Portland only by the people of the state. Tow and every other citizen will benefit if yon, on November second, VOTE SIO YES ON THE BALLOT THE PORT OF PORTLAND DOCK COM- M1HHION CONSOLIDATION BILL. OREGON PORT DEVELOPEMENT LEAGUE. L. W. Trimble, Secretary. H-.ir.i Bachelors. Aiminv the w' famous bachelor in the world's history are: Michael iiicelo, Unfurl, l'ettari-h, Alexundei Pope, Sir lnac Newton, Schopen hauer. 'Nrles Lnrnb. Whlttler, Swln I'lirne. Alfrel d M'itMrt, Voltaire. Tlldeti. the scientist . Cecil Itlneles. I'hllTps Brooks, John Burroughs I'resl'lent liurlnmi.n. Walt Wlutmun, Lewis t'l.rroll. Henr Juine. Lord Kitchener. Chopin, Liszt, llwthoveu Xleolu I'rmntiil. l.'beral Offering. One Siinil.i while lit church, there was a p"rl.il yjx-iikor ,ind the preach er hsVi-.: fv s Hl.e-i-i jlver collection. As thtp;n.e -ns heinu passed I grabbed for e dime, the only piece of money I tbi'Vsrt.t I had. I pulled out a penny sr. .lepos'le''. It in the plate, it was nit er.ili the i;i-ntlemiin m- to me smiled that I noticed my error. Chlcnco ""rHnine. " Merry Little Sunshine. Vlsltoi" 1 Just looked In to cheer yHi up a hit mid I'm very glad 1 did. for I met the doctor going out and he says you are worse than you think and may not recover. Boston Tran script rVhy Norwegian Husbsnds Are Happy. In Norway a girl must have a .cer tificate that idle can cook before she can be married. Mark a (X) SHALL THERE BE ISSUED BONDS OF CROOK COUNTY TO FUND WAR RANTS DRAWN ON ITS TREASURER TO EVIDENCE DEBTS AND LIABILI TIES IMPOSED ON IT BY LAW AND WHICH THE COUNTY IS POWERLESS TO PREVENT IN THE AMOUNT OF ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS ($100 000), THE LENGTH OF TIME OF SAID BONDS SHALL RUN TO BE AS FOL LOWS: ' '. " --r $10,000 thereof for $10,000 thereof for $10,000 thereof for $10,000 thereof for $10,000 thereof for $10,000 thereof for $10,000 thereof for $10,000 thereof for $10,000 thereof for $10,000 thereof for to bear interest at the rate of 322 YES 323 NO In view of the desperate situation of thla county financially, the County Court earnestly urgea tha peo ple to vote favorably on the above question. It does not mean that a single dollar of lndebtednesa will m created, but simply gives the countycourt an opportunity to sell bonds to take care of warrants already Owt atanding. Theae warrants were Inherited when the county waa laat divided, and under the law as It now stands there is not one single chance to pay them oft except by an issue of bonds. If this manner It adopt ed, we will be able to make a small levy each year with which to pay Interest and sinking fund and take p the bonds as Indicated on the above ballot. We urge the people to vote tor this proposition and put the county on a cash basis. N. G. WALLACE, County Judge. Cotton Spinning In Japan. Cotton spinning In Japan Is reeard- rd by many to be as Important com mercially as the silk Industry. Have you tried one of our steaks. It is our especial pride to give you a steak that is so tender it will fairly melt in your mouth. Orier one today and if you don't say it is the best steak you ever had we will be greatly disappointed. I TVT TUT New meat market F. T. Cox, Prop. Next Door to Post Office OFFICIAL BALLOT EAST PRINEVILLE PRECINCT NO. 1 FOR CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, NOVEMBER 2, 1920 Between the Number and six per cent (6 per cent) per Another Question. A French woman claims to under stand the language nf frogs. Bat will sbe give the frog a rbsnce to talk! . TUT 1 . Answer Voted annum?