Crook Coiaety Joarjnia VOL. XII PRINEVILLE, CR00X COUNTY, OREGON, JANUARY 23, 1908. NO. 6 CROOK COUNTY BEEF CATTLE Winter feil l i( for the I'ortlaud ml 1'ugot Hound markets ha he come n Important and profitable industry for the cattlemen mid lfIf ranchers of Cruok county. The industry ha grown from small beginnings until this year the rancher of thin vicinity will market no lent than 2000 hum of finished lieef. Thb heats the out put of any previous year. 01 the lsf that are leitig fat tened in tho central part of Crook county that will lie ready for the market from this data until late spring are the following: J. W. Howard, 200 head; Charles Hud ton, 150 head; II. 8. Cram, 350 head; J. O. Powell, 100 Load; John It. Ryan 250 head, T. II. LafoIMte, 200 head; K. T. Blayton, 275 had; beside numerous entailer bunches The Iota mentioned are lliree-year old steers, with a few of four or flve-yenr-olds among them. They re of good ixe and have been well fed ttecauwe of the excellent feeding weather and the good con dition of the hny that U being fed. The hay supply U greater than the demand and spring will find the county with mi vera I thousand tone in the flack. The hay that hat been fed ha almost all been alfalfa or clover and in ruot in stances it hna leen fed without grain or mill feed of any kind. A few exception have been noted thia year however, with a reault that it will mean a local mnrket for barley, oat and corn. In one inatance where C. V. Smith fed 07 head of steers with a mixture of alfalfa and barley bay, the cattle were in much tietter condition than on a ration of one kind of hay, Mid in other cbhmi chopped barley and corn have been fed with excellent euccee. Men' HuiU, Mats and general Furnishings at about half price at J. K. Htewart & Co. Death of A. II. Breyman A. II. Itrevman died in Portland last week and wa buried butt Sunday. He bad been tick for over fix month and differed greatly from an attack of neural gia in the face which seemed to buflle tliM effort of medical ("kill, Mr. Breyman was well and favor ably known in Crook county. He wa engaged in stotkraixing for many year and organised the Baldwin Sheep & Land Company at Haycreek in 1SH5. lie moved from Crook county to Portland in lHiK) and started in the wholesale leather business under the firm name of the lire) man Leather Company. " Mr. Breyman wo married in Halem to Miss l'lirx lm Cranston, of that city, who survive him. The following children reside in Port land: Otto, Mr. jVrtha Ah, Misses Edna and Flora Itreyrnan, and Teddy Breyman, the youngest. He also leave a sister in Portland, Mr. Albcrtine Bartels, of 415 Mill street, and another iter, Mrs. Bertha Sohst, in Hamburg. Aug ut Hrcyman, of Mount Tabor, ia a brother, and Werner, another brother, in a resident of Salem. Clothe cleaned, premed and mended. Satit-faetion guaranteed. Mr. Cuhr, at the Redliy. Notice To Cattlemen The nieiutiera of the Crook County Cnltlt'iiii'ii'H AwxH'latlon art' iv ileted to meet lit the eourt limine at Prtnevllle Ht 1 p. m. on Momlnv, Jnintiir.v Ifi. l!K)s. Mnttorti In rt-liitlmi to runt,'" allotment will cniite In-fore the meeting. K. T. Sl.AVTON, I'rewMent, J. II. (Ikav, 8eretnry. Will Wmt Ctrptt Anyone wlehliiK Mr. Joe Taylor to weave rariM't for the next two month will leiiMe leave order nt the brick store. 2tpd House and lot for dale cheap. Call on J. W. Ilorigun or 1). K. Stewart. MET WITH FOUL PLAY A (i if patch from Madra to the Telegram soys that umnanU ol tlie body of l)r. Iee, an aged In dian pilonidal), living on the Warm Spring Reservation, were found on a trail leading irorri the agency to the Indian town of Simnatdie, Saturday. Only the larger bone of the body and the lower limb from the knee down were found, the remainder of the body having apparently lieen devoured by coy ote. The body wa positively identified by remnant of the clothing ttill clinging to the bone, and by the addle of the Indian, which wa found lying near the body. Dr. Iee lived altout three miles from the Warm Spring agency. He left home lat Thanksgiving, naying nothing to hi wife about hi destination, and ft he fre quently went away for week at a time, nothing wa thought of his absence. Hi death is believed to have lieen the result of foul play, ui, in common with other Indian "doctor" on the reservation, he hud enemies among the Indian. To strengthen the belief in foul play, it is known that when he left home he earned with him a large 4 I caliber pistol. Thi could not le found anywhere about the body. It i further pointed out that hi saddle lay on the ground uncinched, a though it had been removed from the cayuV he wa riding by some person, in orcler to avoid the suspicion which would have been aroused by feeing a horse running on the range with a saddle on. Dr. Lee was a Warm Spring In dian and about GO year of age. For Sale tii'iiln, Hlfnlfti end baled hay for sale. Will deliver by loin or sell In stack. Inquire of Omar t'ta,vool, atC. V. Klklim' store. Redmond Itemi Redmond, Ore., Jan. 20. J. H. Wenandy was down from Bend with the stags. Joe McClay took the stage on and Mr. W. re tarded Sunday evening. Henry Ehret left for home Sat urday morning after a business vi&it of a week or two. W. E. Young was in for a day or two from the tree pulling'job. They have two or three thousand trees to pull. t Chri Ehret i over at Prineville looking after the little girlweight six pounds and everybody doing well. Mr. Lilly and Mr, were over yesterday to church with the new team and rig. It was all a mistake. Mr. Buckley did not go to Washing ton after all. The Ladies Aid Society wishes to announce the meeting for Janu ary 30 with the Mecdames Lamb. I3u;nes of importance i on hand and a full attendance is d wired. Mis Muma has been visiting the past week with Mrs. Eby and reports a very pleasant picnic Sat urdaj at Smith Rock. How is that for the middle of January in Oregon? Mr. and Mrs. V. J. O'Connor of Bend were in town Saturday eve ning on their way to Portland, called there by the death of Mrs. O'Connor's brother. Mr. Wm. Oakes of Freeman Wash., a brickmaker was in town the past weejc looking for brick dirt. He did not seem to find any but liked the country very well from an agricultural standpoint. He went on to Bend Saturday. Messrs. McQueen, Park and frtsler made a flving trip to Prineville on Mondaj. E. C. Park. L0NGH0RN VS SHORTHORN Rolled barley, lowest cash price at J. E. Stewart & Co. (I It Y-ry Tf tit M ; urea1 W inter CI earance Sale , V) if. Y Begins Saturday, Jan. 25 Every article of Fall and Winter Goods must be cleared from our shelves by February 15, and will be sold at lower prices than have ever been quoted in this city- This is a chance of years and will effect a great saving to every cash buyer. parries -in-tnrrriirirrfnrinrtrjiitn ri ri t j u M i j r ti LJ L J m i j r.n m L J li CI Li rm L'J u rn ri.i V'J DPI rm CJ rn uu nn L"IJ n.i nn U'J nci nn L'J BC1 t,j ng am nm U'J nil yu U'J r.ti L!L1 nn uu nn BU nn 13 1 j nn cu nn mil nn nn uu nn uu . nn uu nn uu nn uu nn uu nn uu nn uu nn uu nn uu nn uu nn uu nn uu nn uu n r.n LJ r,.i LJ r..n t j r..i LJ ri L'J LJ r,n L J r.n L.J r.:i LJ r.n LJ nn L J nn LJ r.n L J cn LJ r.n L J r.3 LJ ra LJ rn L J r.n L J rn LJ nn L J rn LJ r.a L J r.a L J rn LJ rn L J CI Every Article of Winter Goods Reduced 1 Thu includes Rubber Footwear, Lined Shoes, Gloves, Sweaters, Wool Sox, Heavy Underwear, Overcoats, Men's and Boy's Suits, Wool-Lined . Vests, Mackinaw Coats, and Jackets, etc. Ladles' Heavy Seamless Cotton Hose, regular 25c values now 7lic Ladles' Heavy -Fleeced Lined Hose, regular 25c value now 19c Ladles' Illack Cashmere Hose, regular !t5c values now 22',c Boy's Heavy Woolen Hohc reduced to 22c Girls Superior Itlaek Cotton Hose, 17 values on sale at... lie Ladles' Heavy Cotton Vests regular 40e kind sale price .' 27Hc Ladles' Extra Heavy Fleeced Lines 75c now 49c Misses Medium-weight Union suit only 35c Ladies Union Suits from (2c to...: 1 27 Ladles' and Misses Caps 22c to 59c Ladles' and Misses Coats at regular price Ladles' Long Heavy-Fleeced Flanuelette Kimonos, worth $2.50 at $1.85 Outing Flannel for Comforts, 2(5-ln. wide, all colors, l(i yards for $1.00 Outings, regularise grade 11 yds for $1.00 Heavy Outings, lte grade 10 yards for $1.00 Ladles' Heavy Flanuellette Waistlng and Kimono Cloth, lTc for 12c Boy's Suits with Kuee Pants, sizes 3 to 4 years $1.85 to $3.25 Hoy's Suits Knick. Pants 3 to 8 years $3.55 Shoes 129 pairs odds and ends of lines for Men, Women and Children at one-half price. Mail Orders filled satisfactorily or money refunded. Remember Sale Begins January 25 c. W. ELKIWS' STOUE r,n L'J r.n LJ rn LJ rn LJ rn LJ r.n LJ rn L J rn LJ rn LJ nn LJ rn L'J r.n LJ rn LJ rn LJ n LJ r n L J rn U i f-l " rS 1 i , . .'5. J j The curious scientific doctrine of the survival of the fittest has few stronger exemplifications than the contest for supremacy among the ionghorns and the shorthorns. The struggle has been long, the steps in the evolution consuming hundreds of centuries. According to the biological philosophers, it took thousands of years for cattle to acquire the queer frontal orna mental known as the horns. It has taken fully as long, by steps still more remarkable, to lose or modify them. In the former case nature alone operated through the principles of natural and sexual selection. In tbe latter case, man became a factor and it was by a system of breeding, along the lines of the natural law, that the longhorn gave place " to cattle either entirely without or with horns much diminished. En tirely aside, however, from this mere feature or characteristic, forceful reasons were in operation to displace the one with tbe other. The longhorn belonged to another day, the day of the frontier and the pioneer. In the older days, the prevailing type all over tie west was the longlegged, long horned animal, with slabeides, much davliaht under them, short ol back, narrow of rump and de ficient in beef-making qualities, occupied the vast plains of north ern Mexico, the Llano Estacado of Texas, the slopes of the Sierra Madre and every valley between the Mississippi and the Roc key mountains. They were driven in herds of countless thousands for hundreds of miles to ibe market towns of the Mississippi valley and furnished the hides and tallow for all industries needing these articles. As beef cattle they were conspicuous failures, tbeir meat being accepted because nothing better could be obtained. When the railroads invaded the range and built snipping tracks from the main lines to the loading pens at the ranch, the last excuse for the propagation of the long- horns was obliterated. Before this the longhoru was an absolute necessity. When it was compul sory to drive cattle for the market hundreds of miles to reach the nearest shipping point, the long horn alone was equal to the test. Beside him fat, sleek shorthorn would have died by the wayside the first few hours of the journey but the "Texas ranger," as he was called, was famous both for speed and endurance. His modern rival was an impossibility under frontier conditions. The problem of water supply was another factor in the culture of the Ionghorns. In the early settlement of the southwest the stockmen were forced to depend upon the streams that afforded a perpetual supply of water and there were few of them. That was before the day of the windmill and the artificial lake. Only the longhorn could find pasture in the hills many miles from these streams and make daily pilgrimage to the water without detriment to his physical condition. This he would do at a pace which taxed the enduring qualities of tbe hardy mustangs of the "cow punchers." The ability of the longhorn to withstand the blizzards was wonderful, adapting him peculiarly to the pioneer period. A Texas "norther," which would freeze a tender shorthorn to death, had no terrars for the hardy long-legs that roamed the limitless plains. i ne early settlers were not pre pared to provide shelter for their stock, but the longhorn needed no coddling and sought his own shelter in the hills. Thus it will once commendable, the longhorn has do place in the twentieth-century scheme. The present civiliza tion demands meat, rather than speed in the marketable produc tion from the range and the long horn was not a meat-producer. He was heal'hy, vigorous and picturesque, but never fat. His appetite was prodigious and di gestion perfect, but he defied every law of nature in his persistent re fusal to "take on meat" He might have been to paraphrase a sentiment from a certain western governor "The rich, juicy meat in the national sandwich," but tbe longhorn simply would be nothing but horns and bone and muscle. Hence bis exit from the pastoral stage and hence his replacement by the shorthorn or nohorn under the inexorable law of the survival of tbe fittest. Tbe latter realize the chief mission of cattledom by proving ideal furnishers of meat and . milk. Their very sluggish ness, inaptitude for storms or hard treatment, tbeir love of luxury and tenderness acquired thereby, qualities diametrically opposite to those possessed bv the creatures they displace, are precisely the ones that entitle them to prece dence in an an age seeking for the best beef-producers. MONEY IN THE HOG BUSINESS Many ranchers ot this section are considering the advisability of going into the hog business, as a means of getting rid of the sur plus of grain produced in thia sec tion. The plan is doubtless a good one and will not only create a market for the grain, but will prove a most profitable venture. Judging by tbe experience of those who have tried it, a good deal more than present net prices can be secure! out of our wheat by feeding it to bogs. One great obsUcle to hograising on an extensive plan in this sec tion has been tbe question of water, but that is being solved by the drilling of deep wells. Crook county, and in fact Cen tral Oregon is at present produc ing a very small percentage of the pork products consumed by it, and offers a ready market for all tbe ham, bacon and lard that can be produced in this section. There is money in it for the hograiser and for the farmer, and it will keep at home thousands of dollars sent oat every year in payment of imported pork products. Madras Pioneer. Real Estate Transfers 7 11 LJ ri LJ rn LJ rn LJ rn LJ r n LJ r.n L'J r.n L'J rn LJ r.n LJ The following deeds have been recorded since the first of the year: J.T.Leeds and wife of Madras to John .Amicker, Lot 2 in block 40 in the town of Palmain. Con sideration, $50. Northern Pacific Railway Co. to Hershey Lumber Co. EJ SW of Sec. 31, Tp 12 south, range 11 east, W. M., containing 80 acres." Con sideration, $480. John E. Fineeth and wife to M. H. Alworth SEi Sec. 22, Tp 12 south, range 10 east, containing 160 acres. Consideration, $2300. Thomas Arnold and wife to A J. Turley W'i SV of Sec. 1, and the El of SEI of Sec. -2. Conside ration, $2500. D. L. McKay and wife to the Christian Mueller Land & Timber Co., SEi of Sec. 18, SWi of SEi and S4 of SWi Sec. 17, and NEi of N Wi Sec. 20, Tp 19 south, range 13 west, containing 320 acres Consideration, $1. T. M. Baldwin, guardian of Floy and E. Fern Slayton, to E. T. and George Slayton The SEi ot Sec. 34, and the Wi of NEi, and the W j of the SEi of Sec. 35, Tp 14 south, range 16 east, W. M., also lots 5 and 6, block 3, third addi tion to Prineville. Consideration, 2966.66 Mable Engs to E. T. Slayton et al undivided 3-6 interest in the SEi Sec. 34, and the Wi of the NEi, and the Wi of the SEi of Sec. 35, Tp 14 south range 16 east; also lots 5 and 6, block 3, in third addition to Prineville. Considera tion, $8180. Arthur W. Clothier to Colton Ei of NWi. Ni of the NEi of Sec. 34 Tp 15 south, range 18 east, containing 160 acres Consideration, $1. Northern Pacific Railway Co., to Orin J. Gray The SE quarter of Sec. 4, Tp 14 south, range 10 east, containing 16 acres. Con sideration, $1280. Cora A. Ferguson to John Fer gusonThe NE quarter of Sec. 20, and the NJ of the NW quarter and the NW quarter of the NE quarter of Sec. 21, Tp 14 south, range 10 east, containing 160 acres. Con sideration, $2,180. Ray A. McGillvray to W. J. McGill'vray Lot 4 Sec. 4; lot 1 Sec. 5, Tp 18 south, range 11 east, containing 81.10 acres. Considera tion, $1000. Northern Pacific Railway Co. to John G. Edwards The NWy quarter of SW quarter of Sec. 20, longhorn were a detriment to him, when we consider the prime object for which cattle are raised. En durance, hardihood, speed and ca pacity for self-support were not the qualities that made good beef. Fat, not muscle, meat, not bones, compactness, not agility, are the qualities sought in cattle for slaughter. With all his traits, H.G Don't Like To Be Roasted The Grundy (Minn.) Democrat has been interviewing a farmer as to the reason why heme merchants are euchred by mail order houses. It's simply enough the mail or der houses have learned some ad- vertieing lore. A farmer reader of this paper makes a few statements in answer to the occasional articles that ap pear in print about the mail order houses. He says: "If the mail order bouse gets $1000 out of this county each month that belongs to the home merchants, the fault is with the home merchants themselves. The mail order houses advertise and gives us prices on everything they offer for sale. They tell us what they have and what they, want for it. Of course we get soaked once in a while, and if we do we can try some other house. Most of the home merchants who advertise at all don't quote prices. They neg lect to tell us what we want to know prices. Of course we can go to the store and ask the prices of this article, and that, but you know how it is one doesn't know so well what he wants to Duy when he gets into a store as when he is at heme. And here is where the mail order house makes their hit. They send us their adver tising matter into our homes and we read it when we haven't any thing else to do, and every member of the family who reads their stuS usually finds something that he or some other memler of the family wants and maiy orders are made up and sent out at just such times. "Right here is where the home merchant falls down. If he talked up his business in our homes the same as the mall order houses do, the people would be in to eee him the next time he came to town. and in many cases extra trips would be made to get things at once that we wanted until they were brought to our attention. "The home merchant can save the expense of getting out a cata logue, and if the merchant wants to talk business with us let him put his talk in the home papers, and put it in so that we know he means business. The home mer chant likely, nine times out of ten, sells his goods as cheap as the mail order houses, and I believe on many things they are much cheaper, but how are we to know if he does not tell us about it? be seen that the verv virtues of the4TP 11 B0Utb ranS5e 15 east' con r. . . : . taming 40 acres. Consideration, $240. Northern Pacific Railway Co. to John G. Edwards The NW quar ter of NE quarter, Sec. 81, Tp 10 south, rarjge 15 east, containing 40 acres. Consideration, $280. G. Walter Millican and wife to George Millican The SE quarter of Sec. 28, the SW quarter of Sec. 27, and the Ni of the NW quarter of Sec. 34, Tp 18 south, range 17 east; the Ni of NW quarter of Sec. 17, and the Ni of the NE quarter Sec. 18, Tp 19 south, range 18 east. Consideration, $550. State of Oregon to M. D. Nye The SW quarter of Sec. 16, Tp 13 south, range 18 east, containing 160 acres. Consideration, $200.