SUPPLEMENT TO Crook County Journal PRl NEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, NOV. 15, 1906. r r i k J r i L J r i k J T t k J r 1 Li r LJ r i k J r.i t. j r i k J r.i k J r k J ri k J r 1 LJ r k J r l t j r t W J r ir k Jk ffiacksmithing That Pleases I 1 he Kind Yihi (id lit. J. II. WIGI.K'S cokxktt & klkixs A Sim li i. Knrm M :n h i htv always 'n liari.i THE O'NEIL Restaurant and Lunch Room SMELZER & ELEFFSON Propa. . 3or jC act ics and Scntlcmen 7cas and SSakcry Jlitnch Board by lh wk, $5.00; with room, $8.00. Meal Ticket, $4.00 Jk J- JkUk Jk Jk Jk Jk-lk Jk JU JU Jk Jk'JL JkJk Jk JL JkJkJk. Jk r.i k J r .1 i. j r.ki k J r.t k j r ,T LJ r 1 k J r..i k j r.ri kJ .i kj LJ r..i k J r.i k j r.n k J r.i k j k'J r,.i k j JLJ I FOR Furniture, Stoves, Ranges, Carpets, Rugs Linoleum, Matting, Lace, Curtains, Win dow Shades and Poles, Wall Paper Lincrusta, Doors, Windows, Transoms Paints. Oils. Glass. Hardware. Cookinc Utensils, Wash Machines, Churns, Etc., go to A. H. LIPPMAN & CO. I and save from 10 to 20 cents on Every Dollar Saw Duit Dummy Shoots Walter Hyde. Kver to into your room late at night, lock the door, turn on the light and find yourself facing a tnnked man who, half concealed by a dreser.pointing straight atyou a revolver ahich exploded during that hair-raicing moment with a terrific rejiort and sent a bullet living past your head? Ever make a run for the door with the crv of "Help" on your lips and, forgetting that a second before you had turned the key in the lock, you mustered up titanic strength and nearly tore the door from its iron hinge? and just at that time discovered that the villainous looking housebreaker and roblier was nothing but a saw-dust dum my operated by strings from an other room. , Ever figure out bow much you would feel like a melted down starched collar if such a thing happeued to you? This same experience happened in full to Walter HyJe recently when he went to his room to retire. Loc ring the door he had just parsed ' through be turned on the electric light and saw stand ing behind the dresser a masked man with leveled revolver. Hyde said something under hia breath There are persons who swear it was the rib ends of a tearful piay er; others aver that it was some thing stronger, savoring of tabasco sauce and well pepjiered. Opin ions differ, however, and anyway that part of it has nothing to do with tbt) . story. As , the , words escaped bis lips he turned like a (lush of frightened lightning to ward the door. There was a flame of lire, an ear-splitting roar and Hyde lakes oath that a soft nosed mushroom bullet parted his hair, forgetting .while making the as sertion that5 he is mostly bald on on that particular spot. Hyde reached the door simultaneously with the revolver's explosion. He forgot be had locked it and he braced his strength against the re sisting lock and hinges. Not once but a dozen times in a third as many seconds he pulled on the pine. The door quivered and groaned under, the euperbu.nan energy at work to wrench it open. Finally he turned around and saw the tightening and slacking of a string along the wall which was doing admirable work in operat ing the saw-dust man behind the dresser. A smothered laugh in the adjoining room shed more light on the mysterious intruder, and explanations were made soon afterward. A few hours before a dummy had l-en Bluffed and dressed ac cording to the ethics of the ordi nary porch climler and two strinps run from the revolver' trigger ana arms ot tne auto-, maton; the first to explode the blank cartridges, and the other to give a few life-like motions to the saw-dust counterpart of a human being. From a stove pipe hole near the ceiling and connecting with the adjoining room the oper ators could see all that transpired by looking across to the mirror in the dresser. In reality they can tell more about the incident than Hyde himself because they were cool, collected and enjoying the sport, while Hyde well, you ask Hyde about it. Not Uuder Suspicion. From Land Oflice sources it is learned loday that the investiga tions on the Umatilla Indian Reservation were initiated to as certain the coection of J. H. Raley and other Oregonians with the wholesale entry of large areas io the ceded strip of the reserva tion. This verifies Secretary Hitchcock's statement that Senator Fulton is not under investigation. The Senator's name was brought into the case by reason of his hav ing introduced a bill to validate the title of a large number of entries now believed . to have been made in the interest of Raley and others. From the same source it is Wrnwl that Senator Fulton was misled at the time the bill was introduced, and this explains his testimony before the committee.