County Journal PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, SEPTEMBER 1, 1904. VOL VIII. NO. 3JI Grook I 2 31 SPECIAL SALES IN ALL LINES ' AT THE BEE HIVE g) Tlie I'Lc-j That Saves Vou Money Midsummer Stock taking over and we must have room for fall Hoods which will soon arrive. . Come quickly or you w ill lose the chance of your lifetime Michel & Go. ft I I 52 BIG WHEAT CROP IN WASCO COUNTY Yield This Year Will Be 200,000 Bushels in Excess of Last Harvest. Retiring ustness On July 1st I shall begin wiling my entire slink .of Mil j.lNKHY. DltKSS (iOOlS and I.AU1KS1 Kl'H.N'ISlllNUS nt SO Cents . on the Dollar I inn coiii Hi ti In go "t "I business mi account "I i-tstii-Hx itnil tlii.x hiiIc nill ii (I. ii J my patrons nn ptirtiuiily In secure the best bargains ever offered . Ill i'lilievilli'. ?rs. ci Bradford mti.l' 1p-Vf XmrmiimorM. Vol, Professional Cards, SI. Clioii, D Tim B ! Ii i. CinUnp M T! Hamilton Stables In. E. MsbipffiJ-ltM, frf,OP. -Slock hoarded liy Hi" ilny, week or month at llciisniiiible rules, ' licim-inhcr us when in Iri villi'. KATES REASONABLE. Wo have Fine Livery Turnouts ftf-Kmi in C'tnini'iliiui with tlif Itrml Stable. SBarnis, jfttomty at Xam would be creeled immediately, aim) H mitatorium,, Boating, golfing, howling ami tennis wiMild lie made special f i a lurif in tlio amusement line. The now company would not only make 11 summer resort of 1 1 it springs, liut also equip it for a sanitarium, for the accomodation of guests both summer anil winter, nml skilled , physicians kept in charge. OrryOM. Ortgmn. WW.' jfttmrmtf mud Committor ml jCam PrimomiHo, Ortgom. The wjieal crop ill Wasco coun ty, ax nearly a the wheiit men can come to it, will I about !)50,0i bushels, says the Telegram. The ernji ul the past year was 750,000 bushels. The increase ,in the crop is due Id the increased acreage and the different melhoilB o farming introduced during the last two years. 'I'ho method followed the past lew yeans has been th old system of the Eastern States. The land is plowed in the Spring thor oughly worked and cultivated in Spring anil Summer, ami the crop put in about September 1. The first rain brings the wheat up" and wis it. In thin way at least half Lt(x:!tIutll lor , ol the land m idle for (lie year, and ouly onc-hulf in crop.: Crops in Wukco which were planted on land in the Kail that had been thoroiijjhly Summer fol lowed during the previous Summer have yielded on an average of 45 liushels.to the acre, with wheat of a eupcrinr (pinlily. In the neigh borhood, of Dufur, )ine of the erojis have gone as high na 58 bushel". Wheat ncrom the fence which wu on the funic quality of mil, and whieh wan worked out he old scheme of putting il in in the Spring hail only gon about 15 to 24 bushel. The plan followed now, and which has bum followed in the Southern Middle States for many yeara, came to the notice of Mr. Wilson, Secretary of Agricul ture, a few years ago, and he was tinder teod to 8ay thirt it wan an old-fashioned system and behind the times. According to his tin- leretanding, the only system was putting it in in the Spring. It is hard to make the local' farmers believe in Spring sowing when Summer fallowing and Fall. sowing bring on nn average of twice the mnilHT of bushe's. KLAMATH ON THE WAR PATH CITY IS VISITED BY HEAVY STORM Hail Breaks Nearly $500 Worth of Glass Last Sunday Morning. Jf. f. S3tnof & Cdwards mftolknap m . ...... . e ..Henderson & Pollard.. Wines, and IfCiftl Finest Ci$ars Li quote, JLM&lk In Stock. Qountry Orders Solicited First Door South of Poindexter Hotel. THE WINNER CO., ' Incorporated 11I0H. DRUGS, STATIONERY AND LP-TO-DATi: HOUSE FURNISHINGS. 09- A'tr W SmH WJ.H a j iPAytttwn ana tSutytom mnswtrrmtt pntmptfy ttay mr might ; XPrintvit, Ortyom, CROOKS Heat Market J. H. Crooks, Prop. Jfrw Line. Of FURNISHING GOODS I ' - Ha A E0!1MLEY1TAIL0R FRESH MEATS and LARD VEGETA BLES, FISH and GAME IN SEASON . None but Healthy Animals Killed, Which Insures Hood Wholesome Meats.' ONE DOOR NORTH TEMPLETON'S OF OREGON LEADS IN PUBLIC LAND SALES Oregon again leads all states in tlio amount of money realized from public lands, having turned into the treasury $1,4 12,5TB, in the last fiscal year. This is over $200,000 ahead of the nearest com petitor. While these receipts an' more than $.)00,'X)0 below Oregon's receipts last year, the state holds its own by proportion. There were 12,874. entries made in Ore gon last year, embracing 1,170,055 acres of public land. In I'M)'.', there were 18,744 entries in Oie gon, embracing 1,S15,S55 acres. Cash receipts that year amounted to $2,015,526. According to rejiorts published in the Klamath Falls papers the Indians of the Klamath Agency have gone on the war path and are after the scalps of Capt. Ap plegate and his assistants. They charge that through the influence o! ( apt. Appli gate the captain of the Indian police has rented tribal lands to outside own benefit; that the lands were' rented to K. II. Horning and .Tom Jackson, of Silver hake, in an unlawful iliunncr; that they could never do business with Capt. Applegate as he would not keep bis appoint ments, and that as a result poor management and ni gb-ct of duty dnuikcn . Indians, men women, can lie seen on the reser vation at any time. Tin y show many more" causes lor grievance ami alter homing I n meeting at Klamath Falls, the following telegrams were sent: "To 'resident Uoosevcit Wash ington, I). C. Ws, the Indians, resiectfully stale that our U. S. Indian agent fails to do his duty. This reservation is going down towards nothing; if he cannot manage let someone take charge at once before further trouble. Answer immediately." The other telegram which re fers to the tribal lands reads as follows: "To the Secretary of Interior, Washington, I). C. We, the In dians, opposing to be approved application of Abraham Charlie grazing permit for his own benitii of tribal lands. It should be consulted with us as tribal owners of lands. Answer." Both of the dispatches were signed by representatives of the Indians and will no doubt bring about an investigation which will determine the merits ol" . their complaints. One of the worst du;l and hail storms which has visited the city for years occurred Sunday fore noon. The hail and rain were preceded with a terrific wind which caught up the dust and whirled it in thick clouds through the air. For fully ten minutes it was im possible to see across the street and houses and stores were filled with the sand and dirt. Following the gale a hail storm of several minutes duration wrought destruction to scon of panes of glass. Nearly everv window in the city which had west exposure w:m shattered and sky lights were reduced to splint ers. Several houses in the city sustained losses of from 10 to 25 panes and some of the business places had as many as 35 paries of glass broken. The bail stones were about as largei as any which have fallen in previous years in I'rineville and they fell as thickly as snow flakes in the whiter. For .several hours after the, storm the ;im , ice hanks remained piled up against the buildings where the wind had driven them. Even the heavy rain which followed the storm of hail failed to melt tlie lrifts of ice. , So far as can be learned the section in the immediate vicinity of the city was the only one visited bv a heavv fall of hail ; stones the brunt of the storm apparently spending,, itself on the higher range ol mountains to the north and east. With tne exception of damage doni to some of the orchards and gardens within a short radius of town no further reports of loss of property, have been received. It is estimated that the amount of glass broken in different resi dences and business places throughout the city will approxi mate $500. th government Inspector. He had removed all the infected sheep from his herds upon the arrival of the inspector and after the sheep bad been inspected and found satisfactory he horridly disposed of his sheep by shipping them to m Kasterc buyer. After the sheep had arrived East they be came infected with scab and it cost the buyer nearly $12,000 to get rid of the bad job. The matter, of course, was reported to the bureau of inspection with the result that Mr. Hickok decided to issue the very rigid order to the sheepmen ol Eastern Oregon which is now effective." CONTRACT AWARDED FOR EXTENSION The Oregon Railroad & Naviga tion Company has awarded to the Pacific Coast Construction Com pany a contract to build the much-talked-of line from Arlington to Condon, a distance ol 45 miles. Official notice of the acceptance of terms was received by the Con strutcion Company yesterday. While all connected with the tran saction are reticent, as usual, it is understood that construction work will be commenced within a short time. The Construction Company ex pects to be able to complete the l.ne within five months, and if these plans are carried out a splendid wheat belt, 40 miles in extent, will be traversed by a rail road line that will relieve a long felt need in that section. The consideration named in the con tract could not be ascertained. Several bids were submitted. DIPPING ORDER IS REVOKED BLUE MOUNTAIN SPRINGS BONDED jras, o. Jieiioy The famous Blue. Mountain springs, or Thompson hot springs, twenty-five miles from John Hay, at the head of the John Day val ley, Were last week bonded to John WBiggs, the Well known Burns attorney, for $22,500. Mr. Biggs, has taken an option for sixty days, and has interested Dr. Collins, a wealthy physician of Chicago, and 4 Photographer POTRAITS, VIEWS, ENLARGING AND A" HTJPRRIOIl GRADE OF WORK Primomitlo, - - - Ortgmn. MORROW COUNTY LAND WITHDRAWN For the re-location of a storage reservoir site for the Umatilla irri gation project, the land office in The Dalles has been instructed "to withdraw from all forms of entry several townships in Morrow coun ty. Orth rs were received from the general land ollice to this effect Wednesday, and until the govern ment engineers finish their sur veys, the land in the restricted district will not be subject to set tlement. "The action of the land ollice in withdrawing the townships in Morrow couutv," said John T. Whistler, brad of the reclamation service in Oregon, "is in accord ance with the lcsires of the re- that has been heavy stockholder in the newly organized com) any which has just conuoisnnce party recently bougnt the big Sisson j seeking a new reservoir site since ranches in Harney county, in the the Willow creek plan was found proposition. unfeasible. It does not mean Dr. Collins and his associates ; that the reservoir will take up all have gone back to Chicago for the the land withdrawn, but it indi purpose of interesting other cam- cates that the engineers expect to tal, forming a stock company and taking over the springs, together with the cattle, improvements and range. It is the intention of tlie new company to expend at least $25,0ti0 if they take hold of it, before ois'ii ing itto the public. A modern up-to-date hotel of 50 or 75 rooms, REGISTRATION BOOKS WILL BE OPENED AGAIN locate it somewhere witliin the restricted body. "We always ask the land ofl'n to hold back lands from entry in sections where' we are pushing our investigations, for it is a great deal easier to turn the reserve back than it is to secure it after filings have been msde by settlers." The order received a few days ago by Deputy (lovernmenl Stock Inspector Lantz that sheep in the Blue mountain territory must be dipped before being shipped out of the state is not as sweeping as at tirst feared and a sufficient loop hole has been left for sheepmen to dispose of their mutton holdings without experiencing additional trouble and expense, says the Pendleton Tribune. According to the terms of the ruliug sheepmen must submit their stock to inspect ion and if the condition of the beep is found satisfactory the owners can make direct shipments of mutton sheep to the Eastern market. Sheep which may be found diseased in any .way what ever must of course, be submitted to the dipping process. This privi- lege applies only to the shipment of mutton sheep. Feeders cannot he sent out of the state under any circumstances unless they have been dipped or the purchasers agree to dip them upon receiving them at the feeding yards in the East. The order also directs the railroads receiving the shipments to thoroughly disinfect the cars both before and after being used for the transportation of the sheep. In speaking of the cause of the ruling Mr. (iwinn secretary of the Wool Grower's Association, yester day said: "It was the pernicious practice of one or two sheepmen last year, especially that has caus ed all this trouble and has accord ingly placed all the sheepmen in Eastern Oregon in a very unwhole some light, at least as far as Mr. Hickok is concerned. This sheep man in question, who is said to live in Baker county, is guilty of the crime of 'legging' and hi work ed it very successful! v last vear on By a provision in the direct primary law enacted last June at the polls, registration of voters will be resumed this Autumn for the November elections. Hereto fore the registration law has been deficient in that respect, for it has required electors to register prior to May 15 in order to vote in November for President, or else Uo vote on the aflitlavit of six free holders. County Clerks through out the state are now required to reopen the registration books "between September 20, 1904", and 5 o'clock p.m., of October 20, 1(504, and between the same dates in each and every year thereafter in which there shall lie an election of Presidential electors." In November the .first elections for prohibition will be held under the local option law, on the same day as the election for President, namely November 8. CASCADE ROUTE ' LOSES SUPPORT The project of building a wagon road from Detroit, the terminus of the Corvallis & Eastern Rail road, across the Cascade Moun tains by way of Minto Pass, which the County Courts of Marion and Linu Counties have been consider ing for some time, has been finally abandoned. The plan proposed was to build the road along the survey of the C. it E. railroad, using the grade which it has con structed for several miles, to the summit of tlie mountains; then to tun: southward for a distance of about eight miles, and strike the Willamette Valley & Cascade Mountain wagon road at Big Lake, or the Matoles River. County Judges Scott, of Marion, and Stewart, of I. inn, after levi ral consultations and considerable in vestigation, Jiave found the plan not good for several reasons. In the first place the exiiense of con strui'tinf the road would be too great for the actual benefit to lie derived from it. It was thought when the plan was first proised that the road could be built, since the, C. & K: had kindly offered the use of its grade, lur alsiut $1500, but Judge Stewart says investiga tion disclosed that amount would not build half of the bridg'-s required.