Crook County Jourcs!. I surface on n solid la dy, really limit for fur senium in tlio Ilehrirg CCU.'KIY OFFICIAL l'APER. THURSDAY. Al'IUL 81, 190:! Repabfa lioveriior, W. J. H'EXISH, of Pendleton. Siiii'emo Judge, K. S. BEAN, of Lane. See., uf Suite, F.'I. D'JMUU, of Astoria..' Treasurer, CHAS. E. MOOKIi. uf KLiiiiiith. Attorney General, A. M. CKAVYFOKI), of Douglas. Sut. Public Instruction, J.H. ACKKRMAX, Muhmmmh. State Printer, J. R. WHITNEY, of Linn. A RnniAif Ro.irlnil flood. ! hang hack a ltttu and that action son they Knew that tint mother reads J 1 1 a western, trend ot tin) seals- KiVillli nut til ty i t I soity waters at the et(iiiitor, when the ! miles from tlm Prihilovn to gel toud surface of the eur'.h is moving the ! lish in the .la pa it htnain. ns no , . , ' , I fastest, and thin western movement ; food lish were to he found in tlm StStS lickk.'!,,"llH ,tu' cqmitor ilmws into it cold waters elo-er to t!ie rookerien. from north and south the currents! comim from tlm nobir re-mm ! Off Japan this equatorial stream ' Pushed down a telegraph linn of warmer water is from oOO to (100' whioh n""' CKII, "f Li'l. 1, mile, wide, moves eighty mile, a ; 1"ul U"'CM"'- ,"'Su,,Jil, in ley Winer, mi mue!i, "guvta. me a terriolo cold and cough. It grew worse iluilv. Finally the best iltu'lmu it curves back across the. Pacific i Ot.kl.iml, Jich., 'sioux City nml and warms the coast it moves j Oumlm said I luul Couiainiption and southward. Because the greatest could not live. Then I began using coast rainfall is at Capo Flattery, ! I'r. King's Now Discovery and waa and there it is 125 inches a year-, ' wholly cured by six bottles." l'osi Professor llavidsi.n incline. to the tivel.v BO'oanteed for Coughs, Colds opinion that about there the Japan ' nml M T!""!lt tWiublon by Adarnson .SWihiiek Co. , 1'iice uOc and $1.1)0. Conpiess 2nd District, , J. X. WILLIAMSON, l'rineville. Joint repiesentatives, Wasco, Crook, Lake and Klamath counties: N. WHEALH0X and J. X. IK'KGESS, of Wasco and R. A. EMMITT of Klnniath. IJepublH'an Comity Tickec. County Judge, W. C. WILLS, of Willow Creek. County Clerk, CAREY FOSTER, of l'rineville. Sheriff, J. S. JIcMEEX, of Haystack. Commissioner, M. D. POWELL, of McKay. Treasurer, MARSH AUBREY, of Send. ' Assessor, B. F. JOHNSON, of Mill Creek. Surveyor, C. A. GRAYES, of Montgomery. Coroner, : J. L. MvCULLOCH, of Prineville. day and gives the shores of Formosa i a temperature of 8G degrees. After "Wonders Of Oeean Rivers. Professor George Davidson, of the University of California, pres ident of the Geographical Society of the Pacific, spoke in the Academy of Sciences Hall in Sv.n Francisco recently upon "The Currents and Climatology of the Pacific." His talk was based largely upon his personal investigations during many years, and was roughly il lustrated with a large map he had especially prepared to indicate the sweeping course of the Pacific cur rents and the general wall-like mountain chain draw n in a mighty curve about the shores of the west ern ocean. . He said thet the equatorial cur rent in the Atlantic that moves westward into the Gulf of Mexico and sweeps northward as the Gulf Stream and curves across to warm the shores of Europe had its count erpart system in the Pacific in the equatorial current that started about at Panama and moves west ward to the Philippines, is deflected by those plateau-like barriers, turn ed northward along the Japanese coast and sweeps in a great upward curve back across the Pacific as the Japan stream to warm the north ern shores' of this country, and come down and' deflect southwest ward, to be redrawn into the equatorial current for another trip across to the Philippines. But, while the two big oceans have sim ilar ocean currents, their shores arc different. The Pacific, beginning at Cape Horn, extending up the cost to the Aleutian islands, over to China, Japan, the Philippines and ending way down at Tasmania, is hounded by a mountain wall (dose to shore ranging roughly from 5000 to 15,000 feet in height and having no fewer than 850 active volcanoes in a distance of 20,000 m.les. Professor Davidson went on to explain that the equatorial current moves westward because the earth is turning eastward all the while, and the ocean, being a movable current, with its ruin-bearing vapors, must strike its midstream. As this current passes San Fran-. N.nlco. Cisco it widens to 10(H) miles, and All persona wishing grist work done has given lip a good deal of its Rmj 60 ,.iwe having old grists on our warmth to the chilly coast of the books, must call and get same on or north. Professor Davidson has a before May 2t)tU aa we will shut down record of some seventv Japanese at that time. junks, carried away in typhoons and left to drift with the Japan stream, and the wrecks, a few of them with men on board, shows where the stream strikes all around the great curve and way around to the Hawaiian islands. He spoke of one junk that had been picked up 300 miles Bouthwestward of Santa Barbara with three survivors of a large crew after drifting for 517 days in 'the Japan stream thousands of miles. From that drift the rate of the movement of the stream was found to be ten miles a day. He told of a so called tidal wavo that had struck this cost, and ex plained that it was an earthquake wave from Japan. It crotsed the Pacific ocean about 0000 miles in eleven and a half minutes and made itself felt way up into the Tuolumne river and in San Fran cisco and San Diego bay. From that wave rate the scientists com puted the average depth of the Pacific between here and Japan to be between 2700 and 200 fathom.?, or 16,000 feet, and they established this before the ocean cable-la vers ' in the Atlantic had learned the depth of that ocean. Scientists had also found a depth ol more than five miles in the Pacific, the deepest over sounded. He said that when the Canad ians asked for even a fiftv-mile Stkwaut k Co. 4 N The jrreatoi-t ambition of Amur. Jj ican men and women is to have 1 S homes blessed with children. Tlio p woman tc'lictal u-iih fi.n,.,i .n... Cfl.se is e.itwtmtlv ....... ...til. w Feeoming a cl.ildlena wife. No I mnliciin can restoro .lend or- ' prans, bat Wine of Cardui doea regulate derangements that pre-1 & vent conception ; does prevent E ! rri.iac does restore weak a functions and shattered nerve JO and does briag babies to h'.nica $ barren ami desoi.ue for years, j Wine of CuMui pyes women the $ health si:d stn-n-.h to bear heal- w '. 1.:' i a i.i,. vui.i.ruu. iliii can p-, a g 6 dollar boitlo n' Vi'ing of Car-hii 3 from voir dealt r. a u is i-t -L,jr hL sft & h 3 1 Big Deal h TyncwrHcrs. 'tfj' ' 'Ci ' -K made has been ordered bv the Miu- ; 'Kr-'V.'o-'-'n--.'-. 'X ISliy of JllHli.'c, which, after three A.isi.Ihii (iovci'iinienl Oiilers l'J(M) s ' hii.li -i I'retiitei'H, "Vinson, Feb. 7. The great est single piir.eliase o' typewriters ever nioliths of cxhauslivc coiiiH'titive test, has contracted to oqtlip the entire ministry with not less than 1200 Smith Premier typewriters, supplying every court." Press Dispatch to Portland Oregnninn, February 7. Portland olliee .-mith Premier Typewriter Co., 122 Third St., I. & M. ALKXANDF.U.t CD., Agents, V. T. FOGLK, Agent, Prlnevilhi, Oregon SlffilK illElillil Fire-proof building, DOx.'KK) feet, is now ready to handle Merchandise, Wool, etc. mil voaa mmn to shakiko t'ICALK.'tS IN Coal, Flour, Lumber, Wood, Hay and Grain. Special Attention given to wool trade. 1'ir-t-clans baling and grading facilities. Also murk yaiils, l.ilrH plans. All I'Mmi .Improvements for Handling Stock. I'ROPtUETOKS:- f KuKiell .( On., li.it.ldira, Tlin O.dlen. Mooiiii linos , Itinliers, Mi n. W. liiin, Tin, f),ll,. Jl F. Lai iiai.is, Tlm t)ilb'. A. M. KELSAY, General Manager. MHrr.r-l Sit -n y 1 . "'in., prtl I. '.-'CI, ityi.L or.-' ho leo . v.i u.u one ri.ael.-'jr.j of ck-cree-M. had ha-ti ' il hi '1 ttllti) 1 t.,f. U,r n L (j ill u.ici. :,tt I .ainothro( iln f. j W.y i t! wnWi wis b ,ta Marw. 51. E f ' ' " 'ld'v w-'ll hf"u:ti : . noui.i!i: u.ia I 9 rt) fiel 'AS Willi S7V -...VH'" CCl'-l t). g jl ''.' i .!! to"! I ui-vi T Will K wiiuyut v.auoi i.nrijin in mv rr.!itift if"1"- J!ri.J. W. C. Sli.lll. a f'.ir fAvIr n.l I n. i-... ..i.i..... Si M 'i7i..,-.iiifl, "".lit 1.. .ttiviiM.iy hfttr.rl. fl '"I.i . lie I l.-i'.iH4ij Jlnl.i.-ii.. I'OM.ufty, r. I:,aie.llr,w I1.A, 'Jurm. W iSmitfi -DEALERS IN Sencra i it- ercnancusQ, SISTERS, OliEGOX. life haoo j'uot recoiuod a full Una of jCadies wrappors and gloves. Uo also haoo a full lino of Senilemon' 3 and jCadios' Shoss. jRn Soods, Srcccricc, Jfardwctrc, JCadios' and Sents' tfurnishinj Soods Cxamina our Stock Call and CHAMP SMITH. Wines, Liquors, Domestic and Imported Cigars. W Q J M 7JO il U ud m 1 ISOM CLEEK. urn The Celebrated A. S. C. Ucer Always cn Hand. Stage llrss. DAILY BLTMLN I'.'ilMViLLE AO SJIASiXO. SCilKDULE, Lphvh Slmniko, (! p. m. Arrive JVincvillo, 0 a. m. Leave l'rineville 1 p. in. Arrive SfmtiiU, 1 a. m. First class accommodations for the traveling public. PASSENGER AND FREIGHT RATES REASCNAELE- damson & Winnek Co., Agent?. G. "U. Ctirnett, ilanagcr. LusiDer, $ Frsh Sawed ShingSes $2.75 per m. at SHIPP'S. r Proprietors of the Prin?vi!le Soda W'orks. FtSmml'llank. FEIHE VILL3 I A) 'it harbor Shop. c !P iwoll tf Cyrus, Proprietors. Jtot and Cold flaths. JPrinovillo, Oro