JotmiraM COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER, $1.50 YEAR PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1909. Entnwl t th pmtofflm t Prtrwnrlll, OituB, at HMwnd-claMi nuttier VOL. XIII-NO. 52 Crook CoMBity WORK PROGRESSES WITH BIG RUSH Piles of Bridge Material and Steel Rails IN THE YARDS AT DESCHUTES Four Thousand Men now Em. ployed on the HarrSman Grade. Thirty-four mile of steel rail, 40,(XX) ties and an abundance of bridge material are (tiled iu tlie Harriman yards at Deschutes, ac cording to C. E. Lewis, conductor of the construction train which lit at work on the line to centra Oregon. Mr. Lewis is in Portland to-day, having been called bore in connection with the conatruction of the road up the Deschutes, aayi the Journal. "A bridge 05 feet high is being placed, about five miles up the canyon, the first to be built," mid Mr. Lcwii. lly January 1 steel will be laid across the bridge and a long stretch of grade ready for the ties will be reached. It will not be a long Job then to lay 20 mile of track In fore another deep canyon will be encountered. Delays in construction will occur at the bridge, for the tok of constructing tuch high treaties la alow and ex acting. ICut the work ia being rushed despite the Inclement weather. Not a day baa been lost on account of raiu or anow. "From information that filters down the Deschutes, there are about 4000 men employed on the grade. Practically all the grade is being made by section work, and for nearly 100 miles gangs of men are at work every quarter mile. "Seventy-five pound steel Is be ing uned on the road, with con tinuous rail couplings. The McCoy tracliaying machine,which bandies ties and rails without any of the old time hard labor, ia being used successfully on the line. Derrick cara are a!o part of the construc tion equipment." Patients Received. Persons needing hospital accommo dations can flint them at my home. I am prejwred to care (or patients, or patifiiU may employ their own nurses. Maternity cases may expect ieriai attention. ti25 Mas. P. B. Poindextkb. Must Irrigate or Surrender Patents. What ia virtually an ultimatum was issued by the state desert land board last week against the Co lumbia Southern Irrigating com pany, a aubaidiary corporation of the Oregon Trust & Savings bank, charged by the United States land department with securing patents to lands under false representa tions. The land board made an order requiring the irrigating company to j.lace within six months reservoirs for irrigating the entire segregation for which it bas secured patents or surrender the patents to the government. The order was first issued by the government against the ' state, which in turn was required to de mand of the company that it re claim the lands secured or give them up. Patents were obtained to several thousand acres in central Oregon by th6 Columdia Southern com pany, of which E. E. Lytle, W. II. Moore and W, Cooper Morris were directors, by representing that the landa could be reclaimed. Sub sequent surveys made by the United States government show that a great portion of the lands patented are so located that tbey can never be satisfactorily re claimed. Who Knows Where William Russill Is? Echo L. Russill, aged 12 years, formerly of Lake county, Or., but now of Petaluma, California, would like to know of the whereabouts of her father, William Rustill, who, about four years ago, worked around Warner Valley, Lake Co. He used to ride after cattle and broke horses for a livelyhood. About a year ago it was learned that the man was working in the vicinity of Prineville and the family wife and two children write to the Journal to find out whether he be dead or alive. He has sandy-reddish hair, weight about 175 pounds, and is 5 feet 7 inches t all. The family is in straightened circumstances. All information concerning the man should be sent to Echo L. Russill, care Gugliemelti, Petaluma, Cal. Prineville Art Gallery. We make all kiodn of Photos and Htntnp Pictures. I'riew reasonable; sutislaetion guaranteed. o3Hm L. h. N015LE, Prine villi.-. SB Free! HTQaQa ? V 11 21 VLVls o o IF res o o o Dolls, Dolls, Beautiful Dolls Witli Every Purchase of $5.00 or more we will give a handsome Doll; Purchases of $ 1 0.00 or more, will get large Dolls, 3 inches in proportion. All the Dolls are pretty and are entirely free. This applies to all pur chases except in our grocery and hardware departments. Ladies Woolen Union Suits Site 4 only, regular $2.50 value, exceptional value at $1.45 the gar ment. Only a few left for early buy ers. Ladies Long and Shori Kimonas in large assortment of beautiful pat terns, one of a kind. 10 per cent reduction on entire line. Shoe Reminders Odd pairs, all sizes for children, Misses and Ladies. Prices 7oVper pair and up, to close out the entire lot. Every pair a genuine bargain. GOLF GLOVES All wool, large assortment, regular 50 cent to G5 cent values, reduced to 40 cents. Mens heavy lined calf skin mittens, splendid wearing for lumber and wood haulers, regular 75 cent at 55 cents per pair. Mens Sweaters All Wool Heavy worsteds, will not get "baggy." Special values at 12.50, f 3.00 & $3 50. Childrens and Misses Sweaters, large assortment in good shades, sizes 22 inches to 34 inches, prices 85 cenU to $2. Ladies All Wool Sweaters, special valueB at $3.00 and $4.00. For Christmas gifts, we are showing some beautiful garments for $6.50 to $10, which we guarantee to make any woman happy. Boys Wool Knee Pants, Very heavy, are Btrongly made, regu lar 75o at 55 cents. Boys Corduroy .Knee Pant Suits, priced at $5.50, special $3.65. Youths Corduroy Suits, long pants, fine whip cording,for ages 12 to 16, special at $8.95. Beautiful Dishes Given Away. Every Tuesday and Friday we give away a beautiful set of dishes. Pur chases from us entitle you to a ticket for every dollar spent here. If you want to know more about this call and see us. 33 1-3 Reduction on all Our Child, rens Coats, ages from 3 to 8. This exceptionally fine opportunity will not be open long. Be sure and take advantage of it at once. Not Too Late for a Stylish Winter Hat. P, is III lit It ' F 4T. K . i - Prices cut to actual cost, closing out the entire line of Ladies and childrens hats. Get our prices. Get Ready for Christmas. Our line of Toys, Dolls, Childrens Books Etc. are ready for your investigation and you will find the prices ex tremely low in comparison with other places. Buy early and avoid the rush. C W. EM NOTHING LIKE BLOODED STOCK Whether It Be Cattle or Horses. J. IL CRAY IS ENTHUSIASTIC Just Returned from Trip to Port land Fancy Stock in Good Demand. J. H. Gray, of the Bonnyview Stock Farm, has just got back from a trip to Portland, where he took a shipment of beef cattle. In visit ing the borse and cattle markets while away he was convinced more than ever of the soundness of the doctrine of blooded stock. He was also greatly pleased over the prest age achieved by Crook county horses and cattle in outside mar kets. "And we have only made a start," is the way Mr. Gray put it. After considerable quizzing in an effort to get a stock story, Mr. Gray said that he had nothing better to offer than a story from the pen of J. D. Dumire that was published in the Rural Spirit. He could endorse every word of it and thought its wide circulation in Crook county would have a whole some effect in stimulating a desire for thoroughbreds. The letter reads as follows: "The horse for the farmer is the draft-bred horse. He is the horse that can be raised by the common farmer with little trouble and ex pense. He ia in reach of almost every farmer in the country. It is a profitable business on the farm to raise a few good colts, for it is just as easy to raise good ones as poor ones. ''The farmers that raise good stock of any kind are the men that select good sires. The men who have good herds and good flocks are the men who select pure-blood sires from one or the other of the several pure breeds and stick to the breeds of their choice. If in cattle it is Shorthorns, in a few years his herd is all the same type and color. "If it is Angus or Ilerford, the results are the same. If this is true of cattle and sheep, it is cer tainly true of the horse. Fellow farmers select a sire from one of the pure breeds of draft horses Percheron, Shire or Belgian it matters but little which breed. "It is only a matter of choice to the breeder himself. Be sure that the sire is a good individual. Breed just such mares as you have. The better the dam the better the result. Always breed their prod uct to a pure-bred Bire of the same breed. "In a short time your mares are all alike and of the same type and disposition, all bearing a family resemblance. You will not have the disposition of a broncho in one and the trotting horse in the other, but you will have a class of horses that are easily handled, easily fit ted for the market and a every day market at home or abroad. "You need not spend any extra time and expense in looking after buyers; the buyers are always looking after this kind. If they get a wire cut or blemish they are the kind that are useful to keep for any kind of farm work. A good mare with proper care will do just as much Bervice on the farm and raise a colt as will a gelding. "Never allow the colt to follow the dam when in harness at work, as the colt will do much better if left in the barn, and the dam will be better off without the eolt. Give the little fellow some oats and bran in its trough; it will soon learn to eat and forget its dam. "A colt is easily weaned, and if proper care is taken it will not stop growing until it is matured. Breed in this way and in a very short time it will be almost impos sible to raise a poor colt. Look at the farmer who breeds one year to a draft horses and the produce afterward bred to some cheap mongrel. His hones io ten years' breeding are no better than when he began. The price cf service fees should hardly be considered. It is the matured horse to be con sidered. It costs as much to raise alow-priced horse as to raise .a high-priced one. It is all in the breeding. "Always tise a pure-bred draft sire a better individual than the dam and then you are sure of gaining. Select one breed or the other and stick to it and you will come out ahead and be on the right side of the road (o success in the horse and cattle business. an DADS HOLD REGULAR SESSION. Shu-mi-a Club Were Entertained The Shu-mi-a Club was delight fully entertained by Miss Catherine Conway Saturday at the home of Mrs. Guy Lafollette. After the transaction of regular business a vote of thanks was ten dered Mr. and Mrs. C. I. Winnek and committee of Mesdames Wickersham, Edwards, Lafollette, and Elliott, for the splendid enter tainment of the club and its in vited guests, on the evening of iu anniversary. Roll call was responded to by quotations from Lowell. The "Song of Our Syrian Guest," a beautiful interpretation of the 23rd Psalm, was read in a very pleasing manner by Mrs. Rova Brink. Then followed a general discussion on the writings of George Elliott. The life and books of the author having been studied during the year. , An ontline of the program for the coming year was submitted by the committee. At the close of the program delicious refreshments of jell o whipped cream and wafers vf ere Berved. Levy of Nine Mills fcr City Purposes. FINANCES IN EXCELLENT SHAPE Australian Ballot Sytem will be Used at the Coming City Ejection. Agency Plains Notes. No complaints of dry weather lately. Mr. Ed Campbell's family is stricken with whooping cough. Messrs Walter Arney and Wm. Hannon started to Grizzly Satur day for wood. " ' Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson of Madras are Thanksgiving dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Hannon. Misses Jennie Harper, May Campbell, and Lorena Hill, who are attending the high school at Madras, attended the basket social at the Mountain View school house the night before thanksgiving. Rev. Porter, Christian Advent, is conducting a protracted meeting at the Rim Rock school house on the north end of the plains. Mrs. Geo. Hurt who has been in Portland the last month under going surgical treatment, writes that she is greatly improved and will return home soon. The Basket Social given at the Mountain View school house on the evening of Nov. 24th was quite a succees. An interesting pro gram was carried out. Mrs. Watts and her pupils deserve much praise as entertainers. The proceeds from the sale of baskets amounted to $41.35, which will be used in purchasing basket ball, base ball, kindergarten supplies and books. Died: Nov. 18, 1909, at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Calvin Fox, Mrs. Hannah C. Whitener. Mrs. Whitener was a daughter of David and Cynthia Kinder. She was born April 28, 1834, in Madi son Co., Mo. Converted in the Methodist church at the age of fifteen she lived a faithful member the remainder of her life. Mr. and Mrs. Weitener emigrated to the west 1899. . Mr. Whitener died in 1905. She was laid to rest by the 6ide of her husband in the Gard cemetery. The sympathy of the entire community are extended to the bereaved relatives. X. Y. Z. Walter O'Netl came In on Monday's stage from Shauiko, for a visit home. He will remain a week or so before returning to the Columbia Southern terminus. He says that shaniko Is lively and that railroad building shows no sign of slacking up. The city council met io regular session Tuesday evening. There were present Mayor Stewart and Connctlmen Cram, Yancey, Adamson and Shipp, Recorder McLaughlin and Marshal Huston. The minutes of the previous meetings regular and special were approved after some slight corrections. Mr. Sbattuck, a a delegate from Hose Company No. 2, came before the conucil to make request for four three quarter tips for nozzles. The regular 1 1-8 and V4 tip threw too large a stream for the smaller mains. The matter was referred to the fire and water committee with instructions to make the purchases immediately. Chief Johnson of the fire department asked the council to have all obstacles removed from alleys that would in any way obstruct or hamper the movements of the department. People become careless and dump their wood into the alleys thus closing them to further use. This wood must be piled so as to allow for the passage of fire apparatus. An other nuisance the chief mentioned was leaving hayracks on wagons that bad been hauled in the alleys. Mr. John son's request was granted and the city marshal instructed to have all ob structions removed immediately. ' Mr. Johnson presented another mat ter of great importance to the city in the way of better fire protection. It was the organization of a hook and ladder company. There was none at present and tha service of such a com pany wae -baarly felt at times. ' W. F. King followed Mr. Johnson. Mr. King prefaced his remarks by say ing tht he had been urged by friends to become a candidate for chief of the fire department, and aa he would have no opposition be felt justified in coming before the council to prefer requests for a more efficient service. He summar ized his requests into three propositions. First : He depneated the lack of interest noticed lately on the part of citizens in. matters pertaining to the fire department.' More help was needed and in order to secure it the exemptions of firemen should be made worth some thing. It the road and poll tax were rigidly collected it would help some. Of late years tha city had become lax in this respect and the result was firemen were no better off than the layman. He asked the council to see that the road and poll tax were collected. The second proposition of Mr. King was how to make every property owner contribute something for the support of the department. A good many people enjoy fire protection for which they do not pay a cent. To reach this class, he would suggest the adJition of a small amount to the city millage, to allow for the needs of a growing community. More fire hydrants will be needed ; a hose cart for the north side was sug gested, etc His third proposition included plans for commodious headquarters for the fire department. While not needed just now, it was thought that In the near future such a step would be neces sary. " The suggestions of Mr. King met with the approval of the council, and favor able action may be expected later. A mill and a half were added to the city levy as a result of Mr. King's efforts. Mr. Boiler presented a petition, sign ed by numerous north-side residents, asking for more and better fire protec tion. It was referred to the fire and water committee, with instructions to report on it at the next regular nieet ing. 1 ' The following bills were allowed : P. L. & W. Co., lights I 4.50 M. D. Powell, recorder's fees........ 5.10 Darl McLaughlin " .. 1.20 C. D. Calbreath, hauling gravel ... 68.00 Wade Huston, Marshal's BaWry ... 50.00 R. 8. Price, hauling 14.00 Live'y-Jordan-Lanius Co 2.25 The reports of standing committees was the next order of business. The finance committee reported as follows t Prineville, Ore., Dec. 7, 1909. . To the Mayor and Council of the City of Prineville. Gentlemen : This being the day when the council fixes the levy for taxes for municipal purposes, your finance committee has gone over the records for the year, and submit their findings, as follows : The indebtedness on the first day of January, 1909, as reported, was $2244.15, with accrued interest to be added, but after examining the records to date, we Continued on page 6.