Crook County journal. (Prineville, Or.) 189?-1921, February 05, 1903, Image 5

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    tPrinovillo Public School Tfotos
ClUV.f KI)ITDIIH,-Clyilu lluwul,
ClinrllnO flu l-t lium.
AHHIHTANTH.-I llnotli, Kny
llinry Hmllli, ldy (ImiiihiK, IImIIiu KIMik,
Nfllln ly. Owlla Nulnw uil Ituth Tnylr
Nora Kizcr wiih absent from the
VIII. vrndii hint Tuesday.
Fiinnio Onborii was nlwi'iil mil-
diiy bint week,
(Veil Yiiiicoy wiih a litllo lull1
lunt Wednesday morning.
Llnnio Fouler was absent
Monday last,
Lester KlT((llOll WIIH ftllWMlt IllHt
week.
Ilorlhii Klkins, of I'rof. MosicrV
room ha dropped out of school
Willa Combs wiih absent from
tlio V, grudu ono diiy lunt week.
KhIoIIii BimiMon wiih absent 11
port ol lt Thursday morning
Artie Hiirilin win absent from
school niio (lit y hint week.
IChIiiIIh Simpson ol tlio VIII.
Hi lulu linn dropped out of school.
Minn May Mollit visited school
last Muinlny.
Aililio Foster wiih absent from
)ht place of study different time
lnnt week.
Mis I'riiluy iuhI Miss Maui
Vandorpool pidd J'rut. Orion's
room a pleasant cull lunt Friday.
Iiilla Edwards of tlio IV. grade
Wild absent hist week oil account
of KH.'k IH'f H.
Clarence Ferguson was absent
from I'rof. Minder's mom several
tiiiH'H tiint wock.
Eincrjcmi Young visited I'rof.
Minder's room hist Monday, Fobru
iiry 2.
life's work 1H,(HX).
Tim educated mini in puiil liy
Hid month or by the your, 'J'lio
President of tlio Uniti'd Slates re
ceives ?.r)0,0'KJ a year for his serv
ices, Tlio president of luro in
Minuicn companies, mill of largo
iillronil companies receive almost
us mncli Hnlury for their work.
H'liilo it is not possible for Hiiy
(rout number of perrons to hold u
position of thin kind, we come
down to tlio salary of 111X10 u year.
This in 11 very low etimato for the
earning of un educated laborer,
Tiikn bin earning for 10 years and
yon-huvo thn neat little sum of
I0,(K). tl'K,0lK) represents a high
average of uneducated lubor, while
11(1,000 Is'a low estimate of edu
cated labor. Their difference you
can readily see i $',22,01)0.
I'll o average time ruipiired to
obtiiiu a good education in ubout
eleven yearn ,i ziJO nays each
miikinif a total uinounl of 2200
day. If this extra $22,(MX)
gained by lhec 2200 day Bpent tit
school one duv must he worth one
twenty-two hundredth of $22,000
or 10.
Ten dollars a day I Tlio hoy or
girl who realizes that will not want
to play truant. Shirking ones
hsiiii will be seen in its true light
not as cheating the trticher, but
one's self out of actual value. To
make cueh day worth its full
amount, each scholar must
fully in earnest.
A hullor-bor Ultra,
Several pupils of I'rof. Mosier's
room weru absent the first day of
this week.
The following persons visited
I'r.if. M osier's room lust Friday:
(irace Wilson, lister Ferguson
WilliH Null and I -ul u Andersun
The I. and IV. divisions of I'rof.
Mosier's room nro preparing to
render a program in honor o!
George Washington's birthday
1'urents and friends are invited to
attend our exercises.
Miss lunma Ketehuni paid the
school of I'rineville a pleasant visit
last Friday. Miss Kolchum was
formerly a schoolmate of ours and
her visit was highly appreciated
by us. We 1iohi that she may
soon repeat tlio visit.
a mimiiiAY pa'iiTV.
Last Thursday evening a pleas
nut surprise was given to Miss
Aletha Dillon by a host of her
schoolmates. Every ono had a
good time which of course made
tlio time seem short. Those pres
ent wero as follows: Ethel Smith,
Frieda Lippuian, Jtha Ferguson,
birdie Morris, llattie Host wick,
The annuls of American history
are reiilrto with instances of hero
ism that make red blood tini'l
Ami the history that is now in the
making is not failing of its share.
We quote The Youth's Com
panioii's version of a reeent story
that is worthy to be preserved in
the memory of every American:
At Sellwood, near I'ortlund
Ore., there was rucently unveiled a
monument to Arthur Venville
lad who Ilea ill an unknown grave
in the Philippine Islands. Ven
ville was born in England, hut
was brought to this country at the
ii(!c of ten months. When he was
only seven years old his father
died, charging the child with his
last ureiiui, almost, to ' lake cure
of tlio. mother and sisters." The
little fellow promised
He was a quiet boy, of studious
habits. Ho liked to go to school,
and ho wanted to go to college.
hut no had to take a place in a
shop to help support the family.
In 185)7 his health began to fail
and be enlisted as an apprentice
in the navy, still giving his people
his wages. The other fellows call
ed him a "gill sailor," he told his
mother when he came home on
furlough, a year later.
Venville was on the gunboat
lorttown in lSD'J, She went to
Kllio Adiims, Kstella Young, Lin- tlic rhiHppuiett, and in April was
Hie roster, r dim I'.stes, Irene
Karnes, Ora, I'rose, Nora Dohbs,
lluba Cadle, Bertha Klkiip, Anna
Salomon, Ituth Taylor, Klva
Dohbs, Maggie Foster, Vorna How
ard, Gertie Hodges, Verona Mo
Gowan, Oliver Adam, Lester
Ferguson, Archio Wright, Willis
Naih, Cecil Yancey, Loyd Yancey,
Lockwood Simpson, Oscar I'rose,
Ijestcr Cohrs, Elwood Draper, Hoy
Foster, Earl Wurzwoiler, Walter
Smith, A. 0. Mosior, Arthur Wurz
weiler and Roy Canning.
TUB VAM'K OF A DAY AT SCHOOL
Some hoys and girls think that
it would pny them better if they
could quit school and go to work.
Can it bo possible? No, never!
You find the value of a hoy's or
girl's time at school by subtract
ing the earnings of a life of unedu
cated labor from the oarnings of a
life of educated labor. This differ
ence divided by the number of
days at school will be the value of
each day spent at school. The
value of a day of uneducated la
bor at a high estimation is about
ono dollar and fifty ccntp. The
amount for 3(X) days in the year at
this rate would be 150. Now
suppose he has steady employment
for 40 years, he would earn for his
sent to Jialer liny to rescue some
Spanish prisoners. Tho young njv
prentice was one of the party of
seventeen which, under command
of Lieu'enant Gillinore, was sent
ashore to reconnoiter.
As the crowded launch ap
proached tho silent shore, there
suddenly burst upon it a storm of
bullets. Several men wero killed,
others were desperately wounded,
and all wero drenched with the
blood of their comrades. Lieu
tenant Gillmore has Bince told in
McClure's Magazine of tho be
havior of Venville, tho eighteen-year-old
apprentice who had nover
before been under fire.
''Having no other weapon than
a revolver, useless at tho range,"
wrote the officer, "I reached for
the rifle dropped -bv one of the
dead. It had been fit in the link
and the clip was jammed in.
Venvillo, one of the apprentice
boys, attempted to fix it. A bul
let went through the flesh of his
neck.
" 'Mr. Gillmore, I'm hit,' he said.
Hut he continued working at the
rille.
"A second shot plowed through
tho boy's breast and came out in
bis armpit.
"Tin hit again, Mr, Gillmore.'
"He was still trying to pull out
the jammed clip, when a hull cut a
furrow in tho left side of his head.
" 'Mr. Gillmore, thoy'vo hit me
again I'
"Ho wilted the blood from his
brown eyes with his coat sleeve,
and then returned to bis task as
calmly as if it were only a mos
quito that had stung him. It was
not three minutes until a bull
crashed into hir ankle, inflicting a
painful hurt. There was just a
slight quiver in the land's voice as"
he looked up to trie and said:
"'Mr. Gillmoro, I'm hit once
more, hut I've fixed the gun, sir
One wishes this true tnleniiRlit
have ended, as stories do, with the
hero's recovery and return; but
when the other survivors of Lieu
tenant Gillmore's party were taken
into the interior Venville, being
unable to travel, was left behind,
and some time later be was killed
by the order of an insurgent gen
eral. Yet his eighteen years, few
though they 'were, had been spent
to some purpose. The monument
stands a fair and1 stately symbol of
the boy's life. May his example
not he lost!
A Farm For Kent
We have a tenant font farm o
from 100 to MO acres. Anyone
having such a place would do well
to call at this oflice.
JouiiNAi- llKAf, Estate Aob.ncv.
Mr.
Whoolor Got Rid of Rheumatism.
"During the winter ol ISM I was mi
lauio in my joints, in diet nil over my
body, Unit. I could hardly bobble
around, when I bought a'bottle ol
C'lmiiik'Hiiiii'j l'a in Balm. From the
limt iiiiliciitioil I bewail to get well,
iinil was cured alid have worked stead
ily all the year. K, Wiikki.eh, North
wood, N. Y. For sale by all drugging.
Frexno I'ropnrty For Trade.
We have a house and eight lots
in tho city of Fresno, California,
which wo desire to trade for funn
ing or timber lands, preferably
timber land. Purties who have
either will do well to inveetiL-aU!
this offer. Will nay difference in
casu lor some choice uronertv.
- - w- l - -J I
cither improved or unimproved
iv ill sell tho above property for
cash"at a discount on what w
want in trade. This is a snap for
some one. Call early and be the
first to make a bid.
Jouunai. Ural Estatk Aoency.
fOOO
Mrs. Wiegans
The Photographer
For Photos that Satisfy
tO CENT. t
On Wall Paper
To make room for our new stock, we have decided Jo put
the knife into Our Wall Paper Department and for
THIETT r5.-2-S
We will sell Out Entire Stock of Wall Paper, comprising
over Ono Hundred Patterns at a discount of 40 per cent.
All 10 cent paper will go for ' 6c per double roll
All 20 " " " "
All 25 " " " " "
All 35 " " " " "
AIHO " " " " "
AIH5 " " " " "
All 50 " " " " '
The above comprises the best selling patterns. Those who cannot
call and examine the stock personally, are assured that by stating the
colors wished will be suited in pattern. Always state size of your room
in ordering. Yours for Business,
C. I. WINNEK, Mngr.
(Adamson, Winnek Co.)
,12c "
,15c"
.21c"
.24c "
,27c"
.30c"
The M. W. A.s
-Will Give-
A GSAiND BALL
FEB.
l,Ut of laten'
Granted to Pacific inventors this
week. Reported by C. A. Snow it
Co. I'atwit Attorneys, Washington,
D. C J. C. Buhr, San Francisco,
Cal., Mouthpiece for speaking
tubes; W. II. Gilbert, Orange
County, Cal., lleet pulling and
liftinu plow; J. G. F. Hieber, Spo
kane, Wash., elf-closing vent and
indi calor for storage casks; W.
Houghton, Snohomish, Wash.,
Harness huckel; J. W. Leavitt,
San Francisco Cal., Handlebar for
bicycles; J. M. Merritt, Los Ange
les, Cal., 'Gopher trap; W. II.
Morehouse, Wasco, Oreg., Staple;
I). H. Mosteller, Sas Francisco,
Cal., Liquid-fuel burner; E. E.
Steude, Newcastle, Cal., Irrigator.
For copy of any of above patents
send ten cents in postago stamps
with date of this paper tq C. A
Snow & Co., Washington, D. C.
L
IMPROVE
YOUR EYE SIGHT
Eyes examined free. Er
rors oi refraction correc
ted. Glasses fitted and
diseases of the eye treated
E. O. Hyde, M. D.
Irrigation Sewerage
Drainage
Water Works Roads
Iarks
Surveys and Plans .Made
Terms Moderate
Address; Alfred F. Sears,
Mem. Am. Society, C. E.
((i Wor. Blk Ptld, Or
20 1903
-At-
G-LAZE'S HALL
COMMITTEES
ARRANGEMENTS S. M. Daily, Orange Hodge?, E.-L..Rose, Ora
Poindexter and S. E. Crawford.
FLOOR COMMITTEE Ora Poindexter, W. C. Black, S. M. Bailey
Frank Bonney, Ralph Sharp and Wm. Arnold. ,
Music by Sh a r p
Supper at Bonney's
A Good Time Is Promised to ail who Attend
A Cure fur Lumbago,
W. C. Williamson, of Amherst, Va.,
says: ' ror mere than a year 1 suncr-
vd from lumbago. I finally tried
Chamberlain's Pain Calm and it gave
nie entire rebel, which all other rem
edies had failed to do." Bold by all
druggists.
Her. NlckeUou Found fiullly.
Rev. Chris Nickelson was unani
mously found guilty of immoral
conduct by the committee of min
isters who tried him in Spokane,
and expelled from bis pulpit at
Colfax. Ho has the right to ap
peal to the next general confer
ence, but it is hardly thought he
will do so, aB the evidence against
him at the Spokane trial was very
strong, and he had litterally no
defense. Certain that he would be
convicted, Nickelson left for home
before bis trial was concluded.
The Colfax church has been offer
ed to its former pastor, Rev. U, F.
Hawk, who is now located in Bos
ton, Mass. The new pastor will
have a job on lis hands, aB the
church has been split from center
to circumference by the escapades
of the deposed minister.
"1 have used Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy fur a number of years and
have no hesitnnoy in saying (hat it is
the beat remedy for coughs, colds and
croup I have ever used in my family.
I have not words to express my con
fidence in this remedy. lira. J. A.
Mooke, North Star, Mich. For sale
by all druggists.
This ilg&aiui ti on erery hoi of the fcnolno
Laxative Bromo-Quinine ti.i
Uw imMdj tbu cam a MM la aa 7
20$ TO $25 WEEKLY
Work at your own home. No
canvassing. Work legitimate and
honorable. Address
Home Work
214 Spring St., Seattle, Wash,
MMIITflN MRIK
I llllllllk I Ull VlflULLU UIIU I
' redby m m
Music Studio
Miss Ethel Kin" Teacher
Piano, Organ, Violin
TERMS REASONABLE
Sales Agent for Music and Musi
cal Instruments.
NextDoor to Kelley's Gallery
The ()rand Restaurant
Mrs. L. Ccmini, Prop.
Meals all hours, 25c
LODGING 25c
Miller Bldg., Prineville
W. H. HAYDEN
Contractor and IluilJer
TShop next door to Dr. Ros
enberg's residence on Main St.
Prineville, Oregon
Stock boarded by day, week or
month. Fine saddle horses and
livery turnouts. Rates reasonable.
Good accommodations.
Remember us when in Prine
ville, and we guarantee that yuor
patronage will be appreciated
and deserved.
BOOTH 4 CORXETT, Proprietors.
PHneville-Silver Lake
Stage Line.
DICK VANDERVERT, Prp.
Carrying S, 9tfail and Passengers-
Leaves Prineville Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, Good rigs,
careful drivers. Freicht and Dasseneers wavbilled for Renl. T.ava.
Rosland and Silver Lake. C. I. WINNEK. Aeent.
FRANK BONNEY.
RESTAURANT AND BAKERY
MEALS AT ALL HOURS. -
MEATS. I
Sirloin Steak 25c Milk Toast 15e
T-Bone Steak 35c 'Coffee .' fin
Porterhouse Steak 50c Tea 53
Porterhouse Steak for two. . .$1 OO Milk fie
Pork Chops 25c Coffee Cake 10c
Muttou Chops 25c OYSTERS
Ham 25c r. , a.
E, extra 10c Csve 35c
Chicken, any style 35c I r m" w"e" ".
Regular Dinner 25c from half past II till one
Lumber, $11 per m
Fresh Sawed Shingles $2.75
per m.
at SHIPP'S.