& Cr Cotinty ; Journa VOL. IX. PJUNKVILLCItOOK COUNTY, OREGON, AUGUST 3, 1SI05. NO. 33 ook MICHEL & CO. Tiro You Going to the FA IR? i If you an very likely you will immmI oitIur a Trunk or a Suit Gase AVe luiv IIhmu in ii iimmiImt of styles and sizes and prices to suit TIM INKS SUIT CASKS CLUB HAGS . TKU-SCONiS $1.50 to $10.00 $;?.()() to $5.00 $1.00 to $1.50 $ .50 to $1.50 BJ Michel & Company Michel & Company Before Huyin (loinc and Look These Over & I ft I i, M$Sk 11 Announcement ... t; Boyd Adams having purchased an interest with 0. C. Dunham in the New York Racket Store, and they having purchased the stock of Clothing and Furnishing Goods of B. Gormley desire to annouce to the public that the new firm has moved into the building formerly occu pied by Mr. Gormley and will do business in our new quarters under the firm name of the OWL GASH STORE In our new quarters we have more room and in addition to the lare stock which wo now havo we will add several new lines making: our store the most complete and up-to-date in the county. We wish to call your special attention to our Shoe Department as we intend to make this our specialty and cater to the wants of the particular Thanking you for your patronage in the past and with a cordial invitation for all to call and see us in our new quarters we are Yours respectfully, DUNHAM & ADAMS CROOK'S SCHOOLS SHOW GREAT GAINS , ...... u ' Total Increase of Pupils During the Year Num bers 509 Teachers' Sal aries Increased. The annual whod r'ort, com piled from nil the m-IiooI ditttrlctf in Crook county, which County Sujicrintcndent Dinwiddi has prepared to forward to Stat Su jriiitoiKlctit Ackerinnn, shows come interesting gains in the various districts. The total enumeration for the county hows 2018 children be tween the nge of six and 20 year?, at present attending school. There are SOI tunics and 1214 females. Thin in an increase of! who in tarn had gent word to the agent at Metier, from whom the Dutchman heard the account. Not waiting to investigate, he hurried to The Dalles with tho sensational tory for the officers. To add to the story, Captain Charles Nelson, of the little steam er Maja, which runs ln-twetn The Dalle and Cam.ade Lock, hud i-eeh the trunk on the river hank Monday, and a young lady of The Dal lei, who eame up on the steam er Regulator Satuiday, hail feen a woman with with a large new trunk put off the lioat at Tunnel No. Taken altogether, the story of the tramp seemed plausible, and the entire bevy of jxace officers took passage for the scene. Confident that an awful mystery, was to he unraveled, and certain that an inquest would he neces sary, Coroner Burget joined the party. When the officers reached the spot where the trunk and dead man were supposed to lie, so coufi- practicallv Stf, per cent over tha 1 denl as ihe Coroner, who by the enumeration of last year The J W,J 'H an undertaker, that he was total number of students shown on ! in the Pre8t,n"e ' the dead that Iat-1 year's report was 1500. Super-jne voirefHie could smell a corpse, intendent Drdwiddie states that!Bt,t neithr trunk nor cone the enumeration this year, high m,C0U.M Le fouI,d' thol,gh tbft tiU f it it., does not include' the -name-1 a trunk and pome I,iece8 of woid of all the pupils who will U . ere found, and tracks could be rolled this fall. Since the .im.ieen lpa(,ing to a dim waoa road' This. was evidence and all that the had been of lakintr the enumerition in February manv families with 1 trunk TF. children'have moved into thecoun-1 nau,fcd awa' ,0 "ome Pkce of on ty to make this their home. In consequence the attendance in the 54 districts into which the county y divided, will lie much heavier next month when the fall term begins than is at present shown in the report to the state superin tendent. The county census was taken, according to law, by ' the various district clerks, last Febru ary, but the individual reports cealment. (!nd the mystery waa deep, until a resident appeared and began relating how a young NOT MANY HUNTERS IN THE COUNTY County Clerk Smith Has Issued Licenses to Only 21 of Those Who Hanker After Powder and Shot Unlesi there is a great influx of sportsmen in the office of Cpunty Clerk Smith during the next two months, and a great many more hunter's licenses issued, the gay and festive jackrabhit together with the mule tails are not likely to encounter much difficulty in avoiding those who have lived up to the law and procured the neces sary certificate which permits them to shoot at everything that comes under the classification of game. Up to the first of the week the county clerk had issued only 21 licenses to as many hunters, and it is safe to assert that there are twenty times that number of men in the county who have a hankering after the powder and shot. Grant county has issued 150 permits, and adjacent counties have -likewise shown their true blue sportsmanship. All but Crook. County "Clerk Smith states, however, as his opinion that there wi.l be a large number of licenses issued during August and Spiifpmhipr anrl nartipnlarlv lady neighbor who hjd been visit- the fifgt ha of thig montfa Man . " . .... I the seaon tor aeer hunting opens. the law having been changed et last Saturday and had left her trunk on the river -bank until Monday evening, and when a team and wagon had been sent after it, it was found that the trunlc had Wen cut open and ctnntv i - thus a were not filed with the suiK-rintendent until the last of June. Theiatter's report to the and a big sensation vanished, and state gujicrintcndent is made upl from thedistriet reports and will supposed foul murder four officers hung their heads and be sent to Salem this week. climbed up to the railroad track, where a freight train was standing. SPECIAL SESSION WILL REVISE LAND LAWS Professional Cards. Ctliott, glacksmithing That Pleases I The Kind Yoii. (ict at J. II. WIGLE'S (Successor to) CORNETT & ELKIXS'S A Stock of Farm Machinery always on hand t-Xam Ortgon. H Jtr tttrnjr-at-yCam The financial reiwt shows that j ne' a8Kea permission oi tne a total of 111,473.22 was paid in ! conductor to ride, but simply took salaries to the county teachers ! I10SSCS8ion of a flat car and rode during the past year, an average qtly home. of $5lJ to male teachers, and 145.34 I . .1 to tetnaie icaciters, an liacrease in both instances of several dollars over the preceding year. The total amount of money received from all sources for educational purposes during the past year amounted to 123,500.39. leaving a balance divided among the various districts of $G17S. 32. Superintendent Dinwiddie's re port covering bus own work, which he is compelled to give in detail, shows that during t'he school year he visited 31 schools in the county and in so doing covered a distance of 400 miles. ' At the present time there are J."i0 books in the library, and this amount will be largely increased' this vear owing to the new state' law which provides for a library tax with which to equip the school libraries with suitable volumes for educational purposes. the last session of the legislature fron. July 15 to August 15 as the date upon which deer hunting can begin. Those who have paid their fee and secured licenses are given in the order in which the permits were issued. Unless otherwise designated, the names given are those of local hunters: J. Frank spinning, V. A. Bell, P. B. Poindexter, Ralph Poindex ter, L. A. Booth, O. C. Gray, O. C. Hale, Madras, Issac J. Lefiler, Madras; W. E. Luckey, Harry Danly, John C. Herman, Antelope; A. M. Laprath, St Helens, Wash.; W. A. Templeton, Brownsville; Otto F. Turner, Pendleton; John V. Lane, Pendleton: TJiomas j Sharp, Jr., Elliott R. Corbett, Tho Public Lands Commission, I Harry F. Evans, Philadelphia, O. aonointed nearlv two vears asro to ! B. Gray, V. A. Booth, Allen II. year, as the wool bins in all the great markets are cleaned out, tft$ output of wool is not increas ing as rapidly as the demand for woolen manufacturers is increas ing and so the American sheep men will l a favored man for the next few years. In the same letter Mr. Gwinn says there is a strong demand from all the corn states for feeders and if the sheepmen do not hold out for unreasonable prices the move ment of this class of sheep will be very heavy this year. CLOUDBURST OCCURS AT TWO POINTS Mitchell waa visited by its first water spout of the season Tuesday night. The stoim swung over the town from the southward and the streets and canyons about the village were soon filled with water. The deluge of water recalled to tha minds of the residents the flood of last year and no little anxiety was felt for a short time, but the water fall, although heavy, continued but a short time. Growing crops were damaged considerably, and much of the hay which has just been cut was washed away. A few hours after the storm broke over Mitchell, a water spout occurred a short distance out of Shaniko, extending southward to Willow cree'k. All the canyons throughout the entire distance were filled full of water and the damage in this district is much heavier than in the section around Mitchell. The cloud burst was accompanied by an electrical storm which burned out numerous telephones and destroyed the con nection on the Prineville Shaniko ? fri .is . une. ine souin oouna stage was delayed by the high water, not arriving here yesterday until afternoon. Ongon, ( Ctunty tican) ffialknap dt Co wards Physicians and Surgtaits. IP : A. FL , LIPPMAN 8 CO. Furniture and Undertaking Ranges AT PORT LA N 1) PR I C US investigate and report upon the operation and needed modifications in the public land laws, hopes to submit a finl and comprehensive report to President Roosevelt prior to the assembling of Congress next Fall, says a dispatch from Wash ington. The commission has about completed its investigations as reganls tne homestead, tne desert land and "the timber laws, but has not disposed of the mineral land laws. To gather detailed information as to the manner in which these laws are oiierating, and to ascer- TO IRRIGATE LAND ALREADY UNDER WATER It is a unique feature of the Moore, Crabtree. The section of the state statutes providing for the issuing of licenses is as follows: Every person hunting game, animals or fowl in this state shall first iirocure a hutjer's license from one of the counties, except he be hunting on his own land. Resident hunters shall pay $1 and non-resident $10 a year for this license. The county clerk shall issue the license upon application and a license will permit hunting in other counties. The penalty for violation is a fine of $25 to DALLES MYSTERY HAS HUMOROUS END Ortgon. iPAysict'an and iSttrgton C ats ansvrt promptly clay or my At (fffiv two etoort xatttA of TToiiptmto ' st mm 9ffin Stromtt. CPrinevilla, Oregon, F. 7. DIEM WATCHMAKER and JEWELER Wati'II, Clock nml Jswki.ky Rkcaikinu A SPECIALTY. Frh'cs Roasonnblo, All Work Ouamnloed. A lino o Watohi'8 nml Spociaolos t Reason able Trices. Shop between Blgga' and Bell's law offices on street leadiug to Court House. Prineville, . . . WOOL PRICES WILL Tho Dalles has as good and alert oflicers as any place in the world, seldom does a wrongdoer escape them, and the inkling that a crime has been committed is sufficient to put them on their mettle. But occasionally they get onto a wrong lead. Wednesday was one of their unfortunate days, and as a refult of an exceedingly novel wild goose chase the entire community has the laugh on them. The cause of their chagrin was a'story circulated by a tramp and enlarged on by an exciteable Dutch man. When the easthound train arrived Wednesday, it bore a German from Mosier, Vho, with intense horro, related that an awful crime had been committed at Tunnel No. 3, seven miles be low Tho Dalles. His story was that a tramp had cut open a trunk near the river bank and found the body of a dead man. Tfae tramp Oregon had told his story to a section boss, tain what changes may be neces- j $100. or imprisonment of five sary in the interest of good ad-; thirty days, ministration, a . special committee, j consisting of Alexander C. Shaw and G. W. Woodruff, of the Forest Service, Frank Bond, of the General Land Office, and A E. Chandler, of the Reclamation Service, have sent into the West to inspect and report on mineral land operations generally, both in and outside forest reserves. Meanwhile, Chief Forester Pin chot is making a tour of the West, gathering information as he goes; Chief Engineer F. II. Newell, of the Reclamation Service, has long been in the West with his eyes open, and Land Commissioner Richards, the third member of the commission, and its chairman, has gone to Utah to conduct the open ing of the Uintah Reservation. . At the close of the bummer, the Commission will meet, consider what information the individual to That next year's wool prices will be equal to or better .than the prices received this year, is fully proved by the activity of wool buyers who are now endeavoring to contract next year's clips at the high water marks of this year's prices. A private letter from James H. Gwinn, secretary of the National Livestock association, to the East Oregonian, says, that buyers are now making every effort in Wyom ing and Nevada to contract next year's wool clip at the highest '""' l : i .1 m members have gathered and what!murK Paiu 11118 W OIienng as an has been prepared for them, and . additional inducement to pay one- will then, as speedily as posstme, agree upon their findings and sub mit their views to the President. If their report is complete in all details, the President will make it the basis of recommendations of changes in the public land laws at the next session of Congress. third of the contract price down now, thus giving the sheepmen use ot tnis amount tor the coming year. Air. Owinn says that there is no doubt whatever about the prices being as high or higher than last 1 Klamath count)' Klamath reclamation project that of the 250,000 acres to be irrigated, at least half is now constantly under water of a depth varying from one to fifteen' feet. In all ir rigation service, drainage accom panies irrigation as a vitally neces sary adjunct, but for half must, for two or three years precede ir rigation. It is proposed to drain off all the waters of Lower Klam ath lake and to uncover half the lands in the Tule lake, the Federal Congress and the Legislature of Oregon and California having given the necessary permission to the reclamation service. The two states have. ceded to the National Government all lands in the lake beds, and these lands, with the exception of the acreage now held in private ownership, will be sub ject to homestead entry when thoroughly drained and ready for cultivation. A greater part of the area, 190,- 000 acres, under the Klamath pro ject, will be irrigated with water drawn from Upper Klamath lake, a natural and inexhaustive reser voir. No storage dam is required here, the lake having sufficiently higher elevation than the lands to be watered. About 60.000 acres will be watered from Clear lake in California, or from Horsefly reser voir situated in Oregon. Of the now dry lands under the project only a few thousand acres are public lands. The greater part of the lands in private owner ship is held in large tracts, and, under the provisions of the recla mation act, those lands must be sold in small lots, as one person can purchase water for no more than 160 acres. The Klamath Water User's Association, a cor poration of landowners with a capital of $3,000,000, has organiz ed to co-operate with and assist the reclamation service. The office of .the association is at Klamath Falls, Oregon, the county seat of