CROOK COUNTY JOURNAL COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER FOR CROOK COUNTY K tared at Ik fot to n at PrlnTtl!.Oreoii. at irrnl rl mailer SUBSCRIPTION RATES fl.50 One Year Three Months.. ftOcte THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 190S. OPPORTUNITY. Superintendent's Addrtsi Before BoyY Farm Encampmsnt. Pr H. O. RLS3ELU KanM America Is but another name for op portunlty. France hits cighVpersons to our one por eqiiaro tulle; Europe has nearly four to our one. The United States has 12 per cent better lanJ than Europe. Haven't jou Utter opportu Dltk-s than the boys of France and Eu rope? Our danger Is that of beconilnj; citravaguut, of fulling to learn the les sons of systematic saving and certain economy bo necessary for the Euro pean boy to loam and practice. Opportunity Always Knocking. It la eaij that opportunity knocks once at the door of every man and that the one who was out knocks ever afterward. The first part of the state ment is not true unless you make the "once" read "all the time." Opportu nity Is with you ail the time. Great corporations are constantly looking for men of brains and character, meu who can do something that Is needed in the world's work. Learn to do something that is useful and do it well and your fortune is made If you will keep at it Today Is Doar'a Day. This Is an age of dolug. Be able to "deliver the giods" and you will be wanted. The test is doing. Learn how to think and you will soon know what to think. A man Is of little value until be can take care of himself. Learn to take care of yourself and help others to the same high standard. An honorable calling is any calling that makes a man stronger for the world's work, anything that needs to be done for the advancement of our civilization. Do not all try to get luto professions. Do not let your parents kill themselves trying to make and save for you. Make and save for your selves. Near the Top. Every one can work at wages that wilt enable him to live and save some thing, but the greater demand Is near the top. The builder of a railroad showed me three vacant chairs In bis office and told me he would pay $2,500 per year to persons who could fill them and do the work. They had been va cant for three months. lie also said that he had advertised for common laborers and got a train load. I watched with great interest the building of a church in a little city. The workmen who excavated the earth received $1X0 per day. The stonema sons who followed received $4 per day, the brickmasons $0, the man who did the frescoing $15 per day and the ar chitect $25 per day. The man who put on the finishing touches of beauty and the man who carried that building in his head before a stroke was made to ward its erection received the highest prices for their services. Work Along a Line You Fit. The man who will find a cure for hog cholera will do the world more good than the man who can repeat Homer in the original. The man who can destroy the chinch bug is worth more than the man who can exhume a Troy or uncover a Pompeii. Direct your talents along lines that you fit and add something to the sum total of human knowledge. Give more than you receive. It won't hurt you, but will help instead. Farm Irrigation. The station has demonstrated that Irrigation by use of a centrifugal pump and traction engine is too costly an op eration to be practical for the western farmer; also that the area to be irri gated in that manner must necessarily be too small to Include general farm crops, the work demanding undivided attention Just at the busy harvest sea son and when labor Is most expen sive. However, for small fields of al falfa, potatoes, fruit and garden. Irri gation by the aid of pump or well, with windmill or gasoline engine pow er, can be conducted with very good results. And it is reasonable to sup pose that the pumping of water on to the land In late winter, when the soil is dry and oiened by numerous cracks and when Inbor is plentiful and corre spondingly cheap, will accomplish no little benefit to subsequent summer crops that could thrive on the stored up moisture. The summer irrigating, demanded when both time and labor are most valuable, might be dispensed with. In the primary tests of this plan all crops responded favorably, al falfa particularly so. Kansas Experi ment Station. Horseradish For Home Use. Horseradish may be grown very easi ly for home use as follows: It requires a soil similar to rhubarb. Procure the rootlets from seed or from the branch roots of any good horseradish cut Into lengths of three to six inches and plant upright firmly in the soil with the top of the cutting even with the top of the ground. Cuttings the size of a lead pencil are preferred. These may be planted in a row or rows six inches apart in row and far enough apart to hoe or cultivate easily. Farm ers' Garden. For Choice Turnips. Turnips should bo grown in drills, like beets, for the early crop. The young plants will stand light frosts. Choose a rainy day for planting if practicable. Cover the seed very light ly. Thin the young plants to five to seven Inches In the row. Sow every two weeks if a constant supply is de sired, as turnips rapidly become hard and woody in warm summer weather. Good Varieties. In horticultural tests of varieties at the New Jersey station the best yleld ers thus far are the Palmetto aspara gus, Eldorado and Erie blackberries. Red Dutch and Victoria currants and Downing and Houghton gooieberrles. - Invarlably tn Advance Sii Month 73 cts 5 eta Single Copio POETRY? C.M.HAKNTTZ JUVTRSIEE l'A. o COEEtSTOKfZNXI SOLICITED INCUBATOR CHAT. A poof Incubator is a temper tester. It beats a baby for keeping a man up nights. Say your prayers often If you've bought a bargain. Some Inea bators improve on acquaintance; oth ers are advertised improvements that do not Improve a man's morals. Hut beg pardon! Of course you have se cured a first class machine and set it with good eggs in a well aired room where the temperature stands at 65 degrees. Xow for a short chat. The hot air machine warms up soon er and fluctuates less than the warm water Incubator. Same with brooders. Then there's no water tank to fill, melt when forgotten nor leak. Before you run for the tinner put a handful of chop In the tank to stop the leak. They nse It in radiators. It's good plug. If you happen to have a poor regulator you can keep the thermometer at 103 degrees by simply increasing or lower ing the flame, but don't forget that a flame la a newly filled lamp will rise of itself, so be watchful. When the eggs warm up. remember that their animal heat increases, and as the chick develops there is more heat un til the last week, especially In warm weather, the heat from the growing chick will some days run the Incu bator. Running a hatcher with damper up is oil waste. A smoking lamp is dangerous. If not a charred wick, a poorly fitting chimney, bad oil, dirty burner or a chimney shoved too tight ly Into the flue, the flue Itself may be clogged with soot or stopped with some obstacle. If you cannot prevent it throw the machine out To sell a secondhand fire hatcher is a capital crime. Don't go crazy if the heat oc casionally runs above 103 degrees. About the best temperature is 102 de grees to 103 degrees the first week, 103 degrees the remainder. When the ther mometer hangs up it should be a de gree higher. We have seen the heat at 115 degrees and a good hatch followed, but to remain at that point long means baked eggs. The hatching temperature Is between 100 degrees and 105 degrees. When the heat is higher than 105 de grees, take out the eggs, cool and roll them and adjust the flame. A good Incubator is not a trickster, and we never have such things to worry us. In cooling eggs the time of turning is sufficient for the first week, ten min utes the second and fifteen minutes morning and night of the third. Mark the eggs with aa X. Turn the trays end for end the second day. Begin ning w ith the third day, turn the eggs half over morning and evening until they begin to pip, about the eighteenth day. They will hatch too soon If you run your machine too high or drag along If you run a low heat Neither is good. The latter will stick chicks In the shell. You will forget some times. We left a tray of eggs cool two hours last summer, yet they hatch ed. We left an incubator door open till the eggs got cold while the chicks were picking the shell. Got a good hatch. Wonders will never cease even if we are dumb and have good forget ters. So don't cry if something like that happens and throw the hatch out You can tell by a test when the eggs get hot if they are pretty well devel oped. They'll wiggle in the shell. Don't let some of these incubator In structions scare you. The more rank some machines are the more particu lar and extensive the code of rules to run them by and the more loopholes and technicalities for escaping a re fund when the smash comes. Watch that thermometer. If the sil ver thread is not solid, but keeps di viding, throw it out An air space in that thread may make a little speck at the end you overlook. You may run one point at 103 degrees, while the little speck is the real end and roast ing your chicks at 110. Some sprinkle the eggs with warm water the eighteenth day. We use the machine with the big wet sand tray, and It does dandy. If you have a ma chine like ours, you don't have to rock the Incubator cradle all night DON'TS. Better be late in hatching than never get a chick. Don't forget that a guinea is an Irre pressible hawk alarm. Keep one and be convinced. Don't expect every egg to hatch a chick and every setting to bring six prize birds. Greedy! Don't set heavy hens on thin shelled eggs. Croquet balls are more suitable. Set medium sized clucks. Don't act the bull In the china shop among your China geese. It will Jar the egg production. Cochin-Chinas know better. Don't forget to set your best cluck on those turkey eggs. You want some thing bon ton to raise birds that bring bon ton profits. Don't Imagine that the earliest pul lets are the best winter layers. Solo mon says, "There Is a time for every thing under the sun." That means pul lets. Leghorns hatched before April molt before December and don't lay winter eggs at all. -Op THE LEADER oyvi- s ; ncn niiirms mu yiucn' arc rrBuy lor your in spection. Skirts, Hosiery, Underwearin fact all the necessities besides many of the) little adornment for the dress. Dress Goods, White Goods, and a line of the most attractive and satisfactory shoes for ladies ISan' illcll GROCERIES High-grade goods in every line Canned goods, staples, fresh and dried fruits, candies, nuts, cigarj and tobaccos. Lunch Goods The Cocoa Traa. The cocoa tree has its habitat In the tropics and flourishes In that sone all over the world America. Africa and Ceylon, the greatest cocoa producing country Ivlng Ecuador. Trinidad Is second and the British West Indies third. The annual crop of raw cocoa probably amounts to 300,000.000 pounds, of which the Vulted States consumes about 100,000.000.-New York Telogra m. Biolovitoka Forst, Lithuania. In the great park Blelovltoka forest. in Lithuania, w hich is about 150 miles In cireumfereuee, the primeval forest still stands, and all the wild animals native to central European forests are found there except bears and wolves, which were exterminated some years ago. Except for the roads which tuuw through it. the forest Is unchanged. It is visited by few people except the for esters. Forest and Stream. Willing to Qualify. A few days ago a recruit was taken to be sworu in by the magistrate. Ev erything was going ou swimmingly till the magistrate asked the man the following question: "Have yon ever been in prison?" At this the man looked startled: but. quickly recovering himself, he blurted out. "No, sir. I have never been In Jail, but I don t mind doing a few davs if you think it necessary." Ixmdon Mall. Mr. Crcen's Waterloo. Mr. Green had been paying SI a week for board. His appetite constant ly increased. Finally his landlady Baw that she must either sell out and quit or raise her boarder's rate. One day after watching him feverishly devour ing plateful after plateful she plucked up courage and said: Mr. Green. 1 shall have to raise your board to $5," Mr. Green looked up with a start. then In a tone of consternation said: Oh, Mrs. Small, don't! It's as much as I can do now to eat SI worth." Wo man's Home Companion. Microbe Proof Furniture. Furnish in bright warm colors and you will have less sickness you will keep the microbes out" said a physi cian. "You know how deadly the snn s to microbes? Well, so la a lesser degree all bright, warm hues are dend ly to them bright wall paper, bright upholstery, bright rugs. Bright cheer, ful houses are seldom visited hv m They are to all Intents and purposes microbe proof. It is the gloomy house, with It3 dark paper, its heavy, dark upholster;.-, Its somber carpets, that ny team is continually stopping at" N'ew York Press. House and Three Lots for Sale. Good house, just been repapered, new fhlewnlk built, three lotx, barn. tc, lor sale at reasonable price. Ad- dnf, T. .). Fekih son, 9 3tf I'rinevlllc, Or. Dillon Feed Yard Open for Business The Dillon Feed Yard is again open or buaineas. Good grain and alfalfa hay on hand. Careful attention given to all teams left in my care. Good pas ture five miles below town. 917-lui B. F. Wiliioit, Prop. r..-i LJ c J n t j r.n The 0'Neil MILLER BUILDING, PRINEVIbbE, OREGON First Class Meals 25c and Up Fresh Oysters and Fish in Season n i.j n Li n tj n tj CONFECTIONERY STORE IN CONNECTION Carrying a choice selection of fine caudy, cigars, orangOH, lemons, etc. Give us a will. SMEIIER&ELLEFSON.Prop. Report of the condition of The First National Bank Of Prineville, Oregon ' the dote of buainesa July 15, 190S At IiEHOUKCES Loans and Discounts 1218,899 IS United Suites Bonds 12.WX) 00 Bank premiHCS 12.500 62 Due from bank 128,834 80 cash on band 82,07 85 Redemption fund 625 00 !05,4K9 60 B. F. Allen, PreiUent Will Wurzwcilcr, Vice-President HOTEL PR1NEVILLE BLOCK v; Liamca A UI 111M1II11 UUUU5 CnnAc Furn'n;n8, Shoes. 5 VJUUUo either dress or work Tha Opals, The opal used lu Jewelry Is dlsthv fulslied Tivin other varieties of less value by calling It precious or noble opal. Opals diavr very proatly In their color eaVets, and these are kuowu us the pattern of the gom. The shape and size of the Hashes of color vary from very small, when the stone Is called plu's point opal, to larger, squar ish singles, whiu it Is a tiarlmiuln opal. .Now York Suu. Lucky, I always was lucky." said Saunter ing Sim. "I don't see." replied Kutlled Uube, how you can say dat. Here you are all run dow n, nick wit do ague and uot knowiu where your tint meal's com In from." "Pat's wot I tell you. It's Just plain good luck. Wot If I was healthy and had a big niuetlte?"-Chicago liecord Herald. Salt In Digistion. Wlssen four Alio had a symposium to discuss the value of salt lu dlges- ' tlon. Oue of the physicians wrote that, while suit In milcrtlou Is good for the stomach and often absolutely necessary. It ought to U takeu apart from the meals. In much tho same way as medicine. He bases his Judg ment on the way artificial digestion proceeds la the presence of marine salt When Sha Locktd Bait. A render for a New York publishing house gives the following, quoted from a story submitted by an Indiana au thoress, as lielng atxuit the choicest bit of bungle he has come across In many years: "Hegluald was bewitched. Never bad the baroness seemed to him so beauti ful as at this moment, when. In her dumb grief, she hid her face." Llppln cott's Magazine. Chalkjng L'p Race. Two Irl.-ihtut n were about to run a race to a certain tree by different routes. Suddenly Mike slapped Fat on the back and ns!;cd how they were to tell who reached the destination first. After a moment's thought I'at an swered: "I tell yez, Mike, if I get, there first I'll make n mark on that tree with this chalk, and if yoit get there first you can rub it out."-Jut!ge's Library. A Mathematical Puzzle. Most people are fond of good puz zles, and many are not entirely happy nutil they have solved them, but tho man who resolves not to go to bed uu tll he has found a divisor without a remainder (other than 1 and itscif) for 1.111.111.111.111.111.111 will be able to earn a gn;d II vln-- afterward ns a sleep, less wonder. For nobody in the world yet knows whether that number has a divisor or not. To Lambaste. "Lambaste" Is a sinewy, heroic word. We prefer It to Its variant "lambust." And It Is u word of respectable age. "Stand ofT awhile and see how I'll lam baste him" was written In 1G37. It come from tl.2 word "lam," to beat soundly, and "baste," which means the fame thing. The tautology Is here only Intensive. Hut the word should al ways be spelled with a final "e." Lon don Stnmbml. r.i L J LJ r i LJ LJ r.i rv.i LJ LJ na LJ r..i LJ n kJ r t LJ r:s LJ L J 153 r,.i LJ ir..'i LJL JLJL'JL.JLjk-fc.J LIABILITIES capital Block t 60,000 00 Hurplus and undivided profits &rj.3"2 &3 circulation ,100 00 Individual Deposits 290,017 7 Dividends unpaid 40 W tm,4w o T. M. Baldwin, Ca.hler H. Baldwin, A't Ca.hier Restaurant I. MICHEL S Clothing, Hats, Caps, Shirts, for day.wear. We can please you Children's Outfits Just now our late arrivals in boy's and girl's caps are attracting'many buyers. We can outfit youngsters complete from crown to toe Fine Ranch for Sale. The ItoHt place on Willow Cnvk runr hundred mul elcht.v nervH ol good riiltlvnlile land; 100 under cul tivntion: !',o ncn In alfalfa, 'At in timothy; Ml acre In israln: giun hoiim-; so ton of hay 40 ulfalfa and 40 tlinotbp; ;io or 40 head of cattle 1M head of work horses; '.M hogs; lot of chkkeiiH, jjoefe. etc.; stream of water runnlntr through tho middle of tin tract from one end to the other; llr xprlnjr i Hie place, water all the year round. Two orchards J!00 tree honrlnjr apple. ea plum und prunes. Good water for domestic lice. Half cash, balance oh easy terms. I- or further Information address II. 1.. Montgomery, lirlxly, t roots county, Oregon. 4 aotl Professional Cards, ?. Orryom, Q C. SSrix S?a CttaU Office with Geo. W. Iluruei Zrrimtuiil: Cliiott, SPAysielan am J Surf tarn iau Asavrarn PumrTLY lur oa Niuiit urrin oni ixjou south or Auiimi'i Vhvq mtoiib. Ii.iii, citiio au re). tluieo teli'iluui. ZPriHtBiiU. Chaa. S. Ctivardt Jf. ff. S3lap S&cArna? .c9 a 'wards ZPiyiieiani am J Surytont. C r 2r &at ltmm-t iPrinan'H; Ortyon. t J?. &!osatibrg 2Py4tian ana' Jury ton Calt anir,y jtrtmplly day r mtgAI Off' tm otri tm-tA 0 T7mmtm'0 rry Jf. rmmSmm mm !PrinavlU, Ortfen, jCawyr Practice In nil State and Federal Court Xaidiato, Oregon For Irrigated Farms t and truit Lands IN THE DESCHUTES VALLEY WRITE H. F. JONES Redmond, . Oregon crook mm m rn OFFICERS: W. A. Booth, Pretldent D. F.8teart, Vice President O. M. Elkinj, Cashier DIREOTOR9: W. A. Booth, O. M. Elkins, D. F. Stewart Tranaacts a General Banking Business Exchange Bought and Sold Collections will re ceive prompt atten tion I i elfiii! '2 2 At we are arranging to manufacture at Itomo tlui line of houtcfurniihings, in onk r to cloce out the atock now ouhAfiJ we are r!!inc all tho pood. iraoe by the Pacific Coast Manufacturing Company AT ACTUAL COST This gives you n chance to make a bis saving in the purchase of any of the following article A 3 Iron Beds, Springs, Mallrc Pillows, Dressers, Chiffoniers Washstands, Commodes Sofas, Couches and Lounge A. H. LIPPMAN & CO i PRINEVILLE, OREGON nnrinr;viririririr,i''"ir'i)nr'irirT,!rT,irirriririn l"JWJ(.JtJkJljJkJkJUJ.JLjl.Jl.jfkJLJi.Ji.JLJLJkjl jl. JfcJi.Jk.rfl- Jl r.i L, -i t 1 a J r i L J r " k. J r 1 a. J r 1 LJ r t LJ r 1 LJ r t LJ ri L J r-i LJ r 1 LJ r t LJ r L J ri Sonera 5$laccs7nitini(f lIoitStXIIOKI.Ntl, Wool) WoKU, Krt'., Nkatlv AND TuoMITLV I)SK Wiikn it ia Done 15 v : : : Siobcrt 9ooro Satisfaction Will PlUNKVn.l.K, L J ri LJ NEW JOHN DEERE I High Life Sulky The easiest running plow on the mar ket. Either Steel or Cast Shares MouAUii-i- .. . y ii ' V'' , If you do not know plow is, it will pay i The John Deere Disc Plow Sold on trial guaranteed to work in henvtbt dohy or rye sod not an experiment. TRICES RIGHT C. V. ELKINS Pedigreed Stock O Poland Chinas o Duroc Jerseys Black Langshan Chickens . C. PARK REDMOND, OKHliON 1-9 git At Cost .a at,1 & to at I 1 I 4 r i t 4 r 1 L J r 1 i j i i L J r L J I "I L J I t LJ I I L J r i a J r L J i t. j i i L J I 1 I I r 1 LI lie Guaranteed OuKtidN. r.i'l I I j ' .,. '-.MS:' B I i I what the John Deere you to investigate kj Gasolino Engine Irrigttioa, Spraying uni Pumping Machinery KiilrlmnkH-Mora" Ednsolliid IHiii'lncH for pimipiiiK, Utility lute. Miiwlim, KiluilinK. Out 11 1 H (l(HillrU'. Kiilrliii ii k Hciik'H for wi-lKlilnK. I'lilrliiiiikH-Miii'au 1 ly i in ii ujh anil MoIoih for power ii ml lti;hl:. Fiili lMinUs McirMi WlmliiilllH mill Thwitk. Full Oiio kM-Aloi'Mt; Jl lllilciH. KuuJ (jlioppi'fH, Wrll I'll nips. , All flrsl qimllly c'oiIm ft I liiwcst prlci-H. AHvii.vn In kIiiiIc. 1 .1 1 i nl IciniN, rnmipt B'Ply' Ill'lllll'I'S mill qllll'IC Hlllpllll'lllN. Willo for caliiloKuo iind prices. V. F. KINfi, Agent, rrimcville, Ore. Fairbanks Morse & Co. .9 II rOKTLAND. OUKUON.