Crook County journal. (Prineville, Or.) 189?-1921, December 02, 1909, Image 4

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    Only Four Blocks From Main Street
Lets Than 10 Minutes Walk From Pott Office
i !
All Lots Front on County Road
Next to Main Street in
Importance
Join
US OB
s
"71
miooaviisiioe .
- .
1 ...... .. .1 . . . ' ..... , ,. " ' ' ' ' - i . : . , , '
$20 Down Secures a Lot!
Balance as Easy as Falling Off a Log
Acre Tracts $300 to $400
SOLE AGENTS:
O
Lots $110' to $125
Realty Development
Lomp
Room 10 Adamson Block
any ,.
Prinevilfe, Oregon
CROOK COUNTY JOURNAL
COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER FOR CROOK COUNTY
Entered at tbt poitoflleo at Prlnerille, Orcgom, seeond-elaia matter
V SUBSCRIPTION RATES-lnvarlably In Advance
One Year , $1.60 Six Months ,, ..
Three Monthi .
50 eta Single Copies-
75 eta
5 eta
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1909.
$10,000,000
RAILROAD
Another Line from Port
land to Lakeview
WILL PASS THROUGH CROOK
Portland, Lakeview & Eattern
It Name of Road Branch
Line from Lower Bridge
, A dispatch from Salem to the
Telegram says .that, ten million
dollars it the capital of Oregon's
latest railroad acquisition. Be
ginning in the city of Portland and
running thence in a southerly and
easterly direction in and through
the counties of Multnomah, Clacka
mas, Marion, Linn, Crook, Klam
ath and Lake to Lakeview in the
last-named county or to a point on
Goose Lake in that county, is the
new road's proposed route. A
branch is also to be built connect
ing with the main . line near the
. town of Lower Bridge, on the Des
chutes River, in Crook county,
continuing thence in an easterly
direction in and through the coun
ties of Crook, Wheeler and Grant
along the John Day river to a point
in or near Canyon City; also an
other branch line commencing at
Prineville, Crook county, running
thence in a southerly direction
through Crook and Harney coun
ties to Harney Lake or vicinity,
according to a copy of the articles
of incorporation filed with the
Secretary of State.
The new corporation will be
known as the Portland, Lakeview
& Eastern Railway Company, and
is organized under the laws of the
territory of Arizona, papers hav
ing been filed there November 12
by William S. Dexter, Charles 8.
Elgutter, Edward 8. Robinson,
James Burns, Sydney R. Rhein
etrom, incorporators, all of Omaha,
Neb.
Phoenix, Ariz., is to be the
principal place of business of the
new corporation, with a branch in
Portland, Or., in which latter place
stockholders may meet and the
directors have offices and transact
all business of the road. The
corporation is authorized to con
struct, maintain, operate and own
a railroad or railroads in the terri
tory of Arizona and the state of
Oregon, and in such others as well
as it may later acquire the corpo
rate rights to enter. Single and
double tracks and telephone and
telegraph lines are included in the
equipment of the line. The termi
nal in Arizona is to be Phoenix,
Maricopa county, and others yet to
be determined, while the . terminal
in Oregon has not yet been decided
upon. ' The papers set forth that
about 500 miles of the new road
will be within Oregon's boundaries.
There are 100,000 shares of stock
of the par value of $100 each, fully
paid and nonassessable. .The life
of the corporation is set at 50 years
with the privilege of renewal, as
provided by law.
William S. Baxter, Edward Rob
inson, and Sydney R. Rheinstrom,
of Omaha; George W. Passell, of
Portland; Robert B. Davy, of
Edgemont, 8. D.; and Louis II
Chalmers and Henry B. Wilkinson,
of Phoenix, Ariz., constitute the
board of directors. George W,
i'assell, 295 Fourteenth street,
Portland, is given as the general
agent witmn tne state of Oregon.
Beaver Bingles.
Beaver Creek, Nov. 20, 1909.
This district baa just completed a
neat school house. It waa turned over
today by the contractor, O. D. Hall.
The building It 20 x 30, which will be
ample to meet the growing needs of this
community for some time to come. A j
good Darn waa awo pat op to accommo
date the horses of the children. We
congratulate the district aa well aa the
trustees for their enterprise and
thougbtfulness in caring for tba child
ren aa well as their dumb companions.
Typhoid seems to be prevalent at
Paulina. Mrs. Elmer Clark, Mrs. Sam
Lytle and Mrs. L. M. Mailer are re
ported down with the disease. Henry
Faulkner la just out of bed with it. He
is able to be around again.
There waa an exciting horse race not
long since between Tom Payne's "Bed
Wing" and "Zida B.," a mare owned by
Homer York. "Red Wing" won the
money.
Jim Fogle keeps adding additions and
conveniences to his place. He haa just
completed a large ice bouse and a milk
house. We are glad to note these im
provements on the part of our ranchers.
. A.E.E.
Mathematicians' Opportunity.
M. Paul Wolfakel, professor of math
ematics at Darmstadt, haa instituted
a prize of $25,000 aa an Inducement to
rediscover the famous theorem of Fer
mat, which haa been lost for over two
centuries'. It waa Ferroat who first
applied algebra to geometry, and It was
of him the Llbrl declared that he knew
many things of which we are Ignorant
la fact. In many things be was la
advance of his successors.
Politely Put. . .7
The manager of a fashionable hotel
received complaints from several of
his best patrons that the occupant of
a certain room on their floor kept them
awake nights with his Incessant and
night piercing snoring. The next day
the manager sought out the objection
able snorer, who happened to be a
singer of foreign renown, and ac
quainted him with the situation.
"Vat! I snore night?" exclaimed the
artist, bristling at this accusation. "Do
you know who I am? I am Spltzler,
the great German basso!"
"Well, then," rejoined the hotel man
ager, "kindly refrain from singing
tights!" ... ,
Maintained His Point
Boger Mlnot Sherman while arguing
a celebrated case said that his oppo
nent could no more prove his point
than he, could cut a hair lengthwise.
While he was still talking the oppo
nent, who happened to have a very
sharp knife, pulled a hair from his
beard and split It As he held It up the
court began to laugh, and Mr. Sher
man quickly called out; 1 said a hali
WOUNDS OF LIVE STOCK.
Hew Injured Animals May Be Treated
by ths rarmor.
Bjr GEORGE n. OLOVER. D. V. It.
Veterinarian Colorado Agricultural Col
lege. Animals on the farm are continually
being Injured by accidents that han
pen In a thousand different ways.
Barbed wire cuta are moat frequent,
and a word or two of advice as to the
proper treatment in the bands of farm
era will not be amiss.
The ordinary wound will heal of It
self If not Interfered with. This In
terference may be from germ infec
tion, parasites or too much meddling
with various applications on the part
of man. Now, let na suppose a case.
A horse has a badly lacerated leg
from contact with a barbed wire. The
first thing to do, of course, would be
to stop the bleeding. This can be ac
complished by a tight bandage of
clean white muslin tied directly over
the . wound or above It Often , the
bleeding artery will protrude, and a
thread can be run under It with a
needle and the artery tied. Do not
use flour, dirt or cobwebs or anything
of that sort on the wound. They are
unnecessary and may produce a dan
gerous infection.
Having stopped the bleeding, re
move the clots of blood and cut off
the ragged edges of muscles with
shears. A pan of antiseptic solution
should be' provided. After having
cleaned out the wound' wash It thor
oughly with the antiseptic solution.
Bee that there Is good drainage from
the wound at the bottom. Do not al
low It to start healing with a pocket
that will bold pua. As It Is practically
impossible to keep a wound on a horse
antiseptic it la not advisable for the
farmer to tie up the wound. Leave It
exposed to the air and apply the anti
septic wash several times a day, Three
good antlseptlca are corrosive subli
mate, which can be purchased at the
drug stores In tablets all ready for
use; formalin and boraclc acid solution.
After about a week It Is well to
change to dry dressing. A powder
composed of equal parts of boraclc
acid, charcoal and Iodoform makes a
very good dry dressing. Clean air
slaked lime powdered over the wound
twice dally la very satisfactory. The
so called "proud flush" la only un
healthy granulation. It Is seldom ad
visable for the farmer to Interfere with
this condition by using caustics. The
results are usually disastrous. Better
In this case to call In a quailed vet
erinarian. If maggots should get Into
the wound a little turpentine or chloro
form will help bring them to the sur
face, where they may be picked out
I did not mention - sewing op the
wound for the reason that In case of
the ragged barbed wire cut It Is very
seldom worth while to do so.
I A wound to heal properly must ba
got perfectly clean and free from
germs from the start and then kept
' clean. Remember that It la largely
a matter of keeping dangerous germa
out and giving nature a chance. Too
much, interference Is often the cause
of tnrdy healing of wounds. j ,
A SURPRISING WEDDING.
It Gave a Shook to the Lady Who Waa
8o Anxious to 8 It
An elderly American authoress asked
me to conduct her to a place where
she could aee a workman's wedding,
aa she required It for a new novel,
writes the Paris correspondent of the
London Gentlewoman. To oblige the
lady I took her to the Lac Salnt-Far-geau,
an establishment at the top of
the steep Rue de Belleville, '.
It waa still early when we reached
the place, and no brides or bridegrooms
were visible aa yet At Inst two char-a-bancs
drove up to the door, and a
noisy company alighted, all smoking
cigarettes. Including the bride, which
shocked my friend exceedingly.
The company then sat down to
luncheon, and we watched them from
a distance, while a photographer took
up his position near us. The meal did
not last very long and ended In the
bride performing a Jig on the table,
while the guests danced around her.
They then started games, hide and
seek, etc., and while the bridegroom
bad his back turned the bride threw
her arms round the neck of a red hair
ed youth.
This led to a fight between the two.
The melee became general, the bride
pulling off her wreath and throwing It
at her father-in-law's bead. My friend
looked on In breathless excitement,
while the guests Jumped over the ta
bles and chairs, but when the bride
turned a somersault alighting on the
bridegroom's shoulders, the good lady's
Indignation rose to a high pitch, and it
waa only then that I told her what I
and the reader no doubt, too guessed
long before, that they were a party of
acrobats rehearsing a scene for a cine
matograph company. .
' The Smart 8t
A lady In a town lying under the
Rockies was much distressed at bear
ing a small clique in her town refer to
themselves as the "smart set" She
appealed to an ex-United States sena
tor and asked him what be understood
by the term "the smart set" ne re
plied: "I think I can give you an
Inkling. In the eastern part of Colo
rado and In the western part of Ne
braska there Is a large tract of land
known as the "rain belt' It never rains
there." Argonaut -
No Police In Htavon.
Small Isabel's particular friend, the
policeman on the beat, contracted pneu
monia and died. Isabel was greatly
grieved until her mother convinced
her that he had gone to heaven. Even
then she was not quite reconciled. "If
heaven Is such a good place," remark
ed the little skeptic, "I don't see what
God wants policemen there for." New
York Press.
: ...
AS
Jl
mm
AT THE TOP THERE IS ALWAYS
ONE
THERE ARE NEVER TWO BESTS!
HAkPfcR
v J ; IS NUMBER ONE
THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST I
. i i
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THE HAMILTON STABLES
J. H. WIOLE, Proprietor
PRINEVILLE, OREGON
Stock boarded by the day, week or month at
Reasonable rates. Remember us when in
Prineville. Rath Reasonable. We have "
Fi ne Livery Rigs For Rent
rrirss'ririnririiir'iBflnfiMfiHfinnBrinrjs AnnnnnnnwwrinfiripifinRPiriPiriBfswriis
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Unusual.
Editor Did you lutervtew the leader
of the suffragettes, as I Instructed
Reporter I called on her, but she
wouldn't talk. Editor She wouldn't!
Was she dead T Puck.
Subscribe for the Journal, $1.50
a Year. County Official Paper
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Sonera Sftlac jcsmithing
HoRSZBHOEINa, WOOD WORK, ETC.,
Neatly and Promptly Done
When rr is ' Done ' By : : :
Siobsri TJfoore
Satisfaction - Will , Be Guaranteed
Prineville,
Oregon.
Shingles, Mouldings, Windows,
'Doors, Glasses, Etc. Etc., Etc
SHIPP & PERRY
PRINEVILLE, OREQON
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