Crook Coaety oiirmi COUNT! OFFICIAL PAPER, $1.50 YEAR PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1909. Entrn-4 at lh jxmtoffl m at PrinevlU, Ortvn, Kcund-clua iiialtcr VOL.XIII-NO.48 NIP AND TUCK WITH RIVAL LINES Lack of Men the Only Obstacle Now STEVENS TALKS OF THE COAL Northern California Looks Like 30 Cent When Compared With Heart of Oregon Completion of the Oregon Trunk Line In ('out nil Oregon, In to bo hur ried JiiMt (u fiint aa men can be de tained to do the work, according to a MtatvtntMit made by Johu F. Hteveiw, prvsldfiit of the road, say th Oregonlan. Mr. Stevens does not U'lleve that the Hue will be built Into California, for lu purpim he dit'lartw, la thu development of a now country, aud tlm rvmiltant Iwrwuie of commerce with the uuiln Hill II in. The O. It. & N. In also rushing Km line up tin PfMchuteM Itsver, and 2200 men are at work there. It waa said by J. I, O'Utvlu, Kt'iU'ral manager of the llarrlinnn linen lu the ructrlc Northwest, that by April the road will probably tie completed for a tlUtimce of CO or 70 liillen, If the work progresses as expected, the O. K. N. Hue will be completed to Itedmoiid, which will probably tie the terminus, of the road until the Hue U extended south to connect with the Oregon-California cutoff, near Klamath. Concerning the work on the Ore gon Trunk line, President Stevens aid: "If I could go to Bleep tonight with the kuowledge that we had at leant WOO men at work on the road on the IKiM'hutee Illver, I would be more at oium than I have twen for along while, or If I could lgn a check la the morning paying for the completion of the road, I would be the happiest man In the state. We bare only between 1500 and 3000 men at work, and we are adding about 400 or BOO a week, or a many as can be ob tulned. Thar la our great need at present, labor." "How far la the road projected?" ho waa asked. "We have contract let for the flint 100 miles," he replied, "which la a fur aa Madraa. We ahall go at least SO mile further, which may be to Ilend or noine other point In that Irrigation district. We have several aurveya Into that locality, but which will tie choacu la not determined." GET RIGHT KIND PEOPLE TO COME Thanksgiving Dinner and' Bazaar The UIt of th Presbyterian Church of Kp-lmoml will servs a TbankiKlvlii. din ner, consisting of turkey, sweet potatoes, oyaters, cranberries and uther delicacies, t noun, and will alio bold their basaaf of Christinas goods In connection during the afternoon. KvSrybody invited. Is Advice Jim Hill Sends to Deschutes Valley BIG SILVER CUP LS NOW HERE Com Show at Omaha December 6 Off era Opportunity for' Valuable Publicity "You are going to get a big lot of peopje In your country; be aure you get the right kind." Jamea J. MIL This b) one of the almpleatatcmenta that Jamea J. II IU made to G. Springer while the latter waa at Hillings In charge of the Deschutes Valley exhibit recently, and probably In all the yeara of experience the great empire builder haa had, the Importance of getting the right kind of people Into a new and undeveloied country hna appealed to hltn aa one of the moat eaaentlol factor toward rapid and enduring progress. 'lie sure you get the right kind of people." This Is the kindly message of ad- vice that Jamea J. Hill send to the Dcachutee Valley, where hla railroad Intereate are rushing the construction of a long needed railroad, and where Mr. Hill and hla associates promise to take the lead lu the development of many reaourcea. Jim IIIII must tie a hypnotist. At any rate Mr. Springer came home brim full of the Idea to get the right kind of people started toward Cen tral Oregon, and he bring also the announcement that at the Omaha Corn 8bow to be held Decctntier 6, a special feature la the edncatlonal exhibit. Mr. Springer put two und two together, and eaye, "Where la there a better opportunity to attract the attention of the "right kind" of of people than to go to Omaha with a splendid educational exhibit such as our schools are able to prepare, and counteract the impression that many eastern people might have, that In coming to Central Oregon tbay would tie entering a region de void of educational advantages and the thlnira that mean much to men with famlllea, who want to establish homes, and who In toy opinion are the "right kind." This la the Idea which be presents to the Crook county people In urg Ing them to send their best efforts in th wav of an exhibit to the Omaha show. Mr. Springer waa In from Culver and met the business men ol rrinc vllle Saturday evening at the Com mercial Club. The gathering was an STUDENTS STRONG IN DEBATE Continued on page 2. Good Buyers Are Coming to Us. Our price on Groceries, Hardware, Implements, as well as on the elegant line of Foot Wear, aothing and Dry Goods bring u the business. We shall continue to make interesting prices and you can be sure that none will undersell us. . 'il mj A1. i Saw .s Bargains in Dress Goods. All through our entire line of Dress Woolens we have applied the knife, cutting off for this and all of next week a Big Slice of the Price. Space will not permit us to make price here but our store fairly bristles with price cards showing timely bargains. Ask to see our Dress Goods. Ladies Corsets. We tnsks special price on the entire stock for this and next week. Our 75o line now .60 Our li.OO line now .80 Our $1.60 lino now 1.20 Our t'2.00 line now 1.65 Our 92 50 line now 1.1)5 Our $3.50 lino now 2.90 This is bargain extra ordinary. Ladies, do not neglect it. Ladies Skirts. Thoroughly up-to-date, made by the most reliable eastern houses. Heavy all-wool Serge all-wool Panama. Cloth and Alpacas regular priceB $0.25 to $6.50r priced, for this occasion at $4.70. Newest Prunella cloth in all shades, regular $6.00 values at only $4 45. Mis ses heavy Worsted skirts in all shades regular $5.00 Garments now leduced to $3.75,- Ladies Shoe Sale. Regular $4.50 to $5.50 footwear at $2.15 to $2.35. Look these over. A few days and they will be -gone Millinery. We aro now closing out our ready-to-, wear millinery and you will find this de partment full of surprising bargains. In cludes children and also Misses hats. Closing Out of Baby Buggies. . . ., PrlrAs tS 45 Jr. tft.50 Includes winker and also natent collapsable buggies, which retail regula rly at $8.50 to $ 1 1 .00. ' Buy your plow now. Stock of plows complete. Ask for our at tractive prices on all lines of im plements, har rows, scrapers, disc harrows & wagons. We have a good price for you on l V l v 1 I i 'siajWiiiiifllt iwiiiiaii tii ?":-'BS ''i-iSMX:':;:, X , ''-'Ay. "? Wire Fencing Buy Your Plows Now High Water Shoes. The kind that keeps out water, mud and snow For men & boys. Heaters! Heaters!! Heaters!!! No free "this or that" We make you a price on the stove that gets the business. We will not quote a price here. You know what your money is worth. Come and see if you can find a heater that will suit your needs. GW. if1 Tin Co mpaimy ry-out Discovers Good Team Material HIGH SCHOOL TEAMS CHOSEN Much of Intent Transpires This Week-Exhibit Will Be Sent to Omaha. Recitation Impromptu, .. PP . Oeorit Muruen. Ol-'ly. Dok. ..Rol.nd Mc:alHatr. .WIM Wye. Editor. The try-oat debate was held last Friday in assembly ball of C C. II. S. The contest waa one of the beat of the kind ever held In the school, aa each of the fourteen contestants showed that their work bad been carefully prepared and wa well delivered. Tne judges elected four teams to represent the high school two in the Inter-High School Debating League and two Inter Society teams. There bas been uo change in the Inter-Society contest which will be held some time later in the year to decide the bolder of the VYinnek cop, which is now in vtie pos session of the Oclioconians. The Inter- Hiirh Bchool Leaene. however, has changed and is this year using the tri angular plan, which has proved such a success in the Inter-University debates between Washington. Id-ho and Ore- ion. Under this plan ther are three schools pitted aeainst one another, each school to develop two teams, an affirms tive and a nesative: one team remains at home and debates an outside team, while the other soea away. All of the debates are held on the same question and on the same evening, so that no advantage is bad by anyone of the three schools. This plan has several advan taires over the clan used Ust year. It cuts down the number of debates necessary to decide the winning team, it gives more students an opportunity to make the team and insures better de bates, as both sides of the question are worked op in each school. The judges, Messrs. J. N. Williamson, R. A. Ford arid George Bernier, salected the following students for the different teams : Iuter-HIgh . School : Affirmative ; Ethel Kidder, Robert Kester, and Ag'be Elliott. Alex Barnes, alternate. Kegative: Ethel Moore, Louise Bum mers and J-merien loung, Caroline Christian!, alternate. Alpha: Maude Potter, Louise Sum mers and Blanch Wilson. Roy Low ther, alternate. Ochoconian: Emerien Young, Clark Morse and Clarence Rice. William Criswell, alternate. ' Misses Margarie Brink and Celia Nelms and Meedames Kester, Baker and Evans were C. C. H. 8. visitors, Friday. We were delighted to see that the Oreeonian reporter in his write-up of the educational exhibit of the Crook county fair used the picture of the Crook County High School exhibit as the one best meriting such a distinction, for which honor the C. C. H. S. takes this opportunity of thanking Mr. Put nam. The High School exhibit will be lent to Omaha to the Corn Show, aa the ones who were collecting material tor that exhibit felt that nothing they could send would boost the county so much as to show what excellent work our schools are doing. AtUctk. The board did not donate us the fifty dollars we asked for to fit up the old court room as a gymnasium. While we feel sorry that their ideas on athletics are riot ours, yet they were very kind to allow us the use of the building and we will have to work a little harder than we thought to equip it, that is all. Basket ball practice has begun and all other athletic sports are deserted for the time being. . The Commercial Ciub Hall was kindly loaned by the manage ment, is used Mondays and Wednesdays bv the bovs and Tuesdays and Thurs days by the girls. The game is entirely new to the boys but in the few practices they have bad they have shown that they are going to develop soma last players. The girls who were on last year's team are showing what a year's practice can do, but they will have to work their daces over some of the new members. ' f Ocktcoaiaas. The nroerara for the society for Fri day, November 12th, is as follows : Song . ...0. 0. H. 8. Nignungaies. Reading . . .Adolphus Myers. I Essay Alex Barnes Talk William Creswell paper Editor Ethel Moore. Impromptu .Ethel Kidder. Recitation Mabel Doak. I Alpla. Two members of the Alpha Society, Louise Summers and Robert Kester, I were selected for the Inter-High School debate. A The followma program will be ren dered, Friday, October 12th : Vocal Solo. Miss Conway. Talk.. Warren Yancey. AM't, Vera Honlth, Roy MrCallUter. Reading Elmer Martin. way Ethel Clause. FrcsfesMa mi Staisr. The freshmen, who entered the try- out debate, were a surprise to the stu dent body, for they measured up with the other classes, something that is not usually expected. Robert Kester was given a place on the Inter-High Bchool team and Maude Potter, the other member, was chosen leader of the Alpha. Miss Amy Davenpoit, of 13, is again absent from classes. Every senior who entered the try- out was given a place. The bust of Longfellow, for which the senior tiave been waiting anxiously bas arrived and was presented to the C. B. H. 8. by Clark Morse, president of the class, and accepted by Prof. M. B. Hockenberry, in the name of the school. It adds wonderfully to the beauty of our surroundings and we hope to see several of these mementoes of class loyalty decorating the balls of their Alma Mater. HYSKELL WRITES BREEZY SKETCH SEES WONDERS OF COUNTRY Entertaining Story of Some the Feature of Central Oregon Country County Court, November Term. Court met November 3, 1909. Present, Commissioner, Bayley and Judge II. C, Ellis. In the matter of the Col. W. A. Bel cher road, petition, affidavits of post ing notices, and bond for $1C0 filed and approved. Viewers ordered to meet at beginning of proposed road, view out, review and survey the same and report thereon at the January, 1910, term hereof. In the matter of the W. G. Waugh road, petition, affidavits of posting notice and bond for $200 filed and ap proved. Viewers ordered to meet at beginning of proposed road and view out, review and survey same and report thereon at the January, 1910, term hereof. In the matter of the S. D. Percival road, petition, affidavit of posting notice. and bond for $300 filed and approved Viewers ordered to meet at beginning of proposed road, view out, review t nd survey same and report thereon at the January, 1910, term of this court. In the matter of the A. H. Kohde county road, petition, affidavit of post ing notices and bond for $100 filed and approved. Viewers ordered to meet at beginning of said proposed road, view out, review and survey same and report thereon at the January. 1910, term of this court. The resignation of C. W. Merrill as Justice of the Peace for district No. 3 was accepted. Upon petition, I. L. j Scofi eld was appointed to the vacancy until the next general election. The resignation of J. D. Mayes as constable for the Kutcher precinct was accepted. J. H. Jackson was appointed to fill vacancy until next general election. A. W. Bayne was appointed road supervisor for the Powell Butte road district for the unexpired term of T. W. Hudson. In the matter of the subscription to ward the erection of the new court house. It is ordered that $4,790.85 already collected be deposited with the county treasurer to the credit of the general fund. Pursuant to the advertisement for supplying 70 cords of fuel, only one bid waa received, that of J. H. Delore at $4 ner cord. Said bid was considered lakes Trip Through Interior by Auto of C. M. Hyskcll writes a breezy sketch of a trip through central Oregon for the Oregon Journal. It la In part as follows : ""When a man starts out to look at ' lands In central Oregon be find a considerable area open for Inspection. I have forgotten how many eastern states could be placed within the great nnknown between the Cascade range and the Snake river, but they are several and sundry. Tou can . travel over that country In an auto -mobile 110 miles a day but you have to hurry all the time to get to the next meal statfon if you want to eat regularly. "There are stretches of 30 to 40 miles where the only shelter Is sage brush for a Jackrabbit to get under. Yet, If the sagebrush were removed and the land properly cultivated, moat of It would raise grain. Cen tral Oregon Is free from a good many modern evils. There are no crowded tenement houses, no North Pole controversies, no neighborhood spats about chickens, and very few di vorce cases. There Is practically no trouble about impure milk over there. Iu a cow country nearly everybody uaes canned milk. There may be a thousand fresb cows on the ranch but, as a cow puncher naively put It, "Who the h 1 would milk?" We stopped over night at Shaolko, the largest primary wool market la the northwest, and the last trading post on rail transportation until you reach Alturas, Cal., 250 miles south ward as the crow flies. While Shaniko is a rattling good growing town considering the limited oppor tunities it has had, It does not grow rapidly. It Is -'all wool and a yard wide," so to speak. But the fond hopes upon which the sturdy pio neers built the Columbia Southern with the Idea of its extension Into central Oregon have faded, lie doughty railroad builders "marched up the hill," but found that they could not march again on the far ther side. So they are passing by on the other side, keeping to the water grade of the Deschutes river, and the Columbia Southern Is not to be ex tended Into central Oregon. While this plan leaves Shaniko high and dry, as it were, the fact should not be lost Bight of that it also leaves Shaniko the permanent terminal of a railroad line and undisputed mistress of the high plains that embrace a considerable share of Wasco county and a gooa part of Sherman. The automobile road from Heislers to Bend, 60 miles, built some yeara ago by the Deschutes Irrigation & Power Company, has been aban- Continued on page 2. Continued on last page. "T if r Y Makes the most nutritious food and the most dainty and delicious a Absolutely Fure No fretting over the biscuit mailing. Royal is first aid to many a cook s success i a i r a. i 225333 Beading ;i Etta Houston