Comely COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER, $1.50 YEAR PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1910. Eotrmf at IIm pmloffln at Prlmnrllla, Onion, second-class maiur V0L.XIV-NO.21 Journal an council HOLDS MEETING Ordinance Passed Reg ulating Auto Speed MOTOR CYCLES, TOO, INCLUDED Muit Fill Up Sloughs No More Nonsense Will De Tolerated. The city council held its regular monthly meeting Tuesday even ing. Present I). F. Stewart, may or, Councilman J. II. Uppman, Jense Yancey, Wardwell Cram, (ieorge Btorkmsnn, J. It. Shi pp and J. II. Hoeenberg, City Marshal Kelso and Recorder iSreeee. Minutes of the previous meet ing read and approved. Pour additional hvdranta have li n added to the city's fire system ,An ordinance to regulate the speed of automobiles and motor cycles came up for extended die cuosiun. After various suggestions and amendment the following or dinance was passed: Ordinance No, 173. An onliimuee to regulate the sjiee-t o( automobiles sod motor eyelet within the city limits ami fur lighting of lauipa on same, Hc 1 1 on 1. Kverr twraon running; in automobile or motor cycle within the i lly of I'rlneville at a greater wxl than S milMS er mils shall lie guilty ol vio lating this ordinance, ami upon convic tion be (or Hit itecortlar'a Court aliall be tlnel oot lea than ten dollars (110) anil not more than fifty dollars $o0,( sad In default of payment of audi fine and the cut of orowwution such per aoiia aliall, by oritur of said court, be confined In the city jail, one day lor aril two dollar, of such fine. Unction 3. No person shall run an automobile or motor cycle within the city of 1'rinevllle after dark without having the Iront and rear lamps lightml. And any pereon running an automobile or motor cycle without lamp or lamp lighted, ahall be guilty of a violation of this ordinance anil a in conviction be fore the Recorder's Court, shall be fined not leas than live dollars (ft) or more than ten dollar (glU), and in default of payment of such flue and eoet of proew eution such perton shall, by order of the said court, be confined In the city jail, one day tor each two dollars of such tine. . Kuctlon 8. Any physician called In sn emergency cane or where the life of a pereon i at stake, (hall not be guilty of a violation of this ordinance. Hection 4. Any person running an automobile or motor cycle within the city limits shsll, upon approaching all tnteraeciioti ol mems, eouuti an alarm, and any person failing to give the alarm hall I guilty of a violation of this or dinance, and uon conviction Wore the Kocorder'e Court shall be fined not leva than five dollars or more than ten dol lars, and in default of payment of said tine and coU of prnaeciition, such per son aball by order of the said court be confined in the city jail, one day lor each two dollars ol such fine. 8ction 6. All ordinances or parts of ordinances In conflict with this ordi nance are hereby repealed. Inasmuch as the city ol I'rlneville, Oregon, has no effective ordinance to provide for the regulating of speed of automobiles and motor cyclea and inasmuch as it is necee sary for the -ece and safety of the citi aens of the said city that such an ordi nance should exiat, sn emergency i hereby declared tosit, and thl or- INSTITUTE AT CULVER Instructive Session Held Saturday. MANY GOOD PAPERS READ Continued on inside page. Superintendent Urges Local Official to Take More Interest The institute held at Culver last Saturday was a most interesting and instructive session. Superin tendent Ford was assisted by Prof. Evans, Miss Parrott and Mrs. Wickersham of the Crook County High School, and by Principal Meyers, Misa Hartley and Miss Hideout of the Prineville graded schools. The meeting was opened by the county superintendent who, in his remarks, emphasized the impor tance of teachers attending these local institutes and urged all school officials to take greater intereat in the educational work of their dis tricts. Prof. Myers followed with an in structive paper on intermediate and advanced arithmetic. He laid great stress on the importance ot thoroughness and gave severs! helpful suggestions for securing the interest of the pupils. Mrs Pougall then discussed prim ary geography and gave methods for securing better work in this subject. She suggested several sources from which teachers could secure helpful material for this subject. Each paper or subject was follow ed by an interesting discussion which resulted in getting helpful ideas along these lines of thought. The afternoon session was opened with a vocal solo by Miss Verna Howsrd, who responped in her usual pleasing manner to a hearty encore., , Mrs. Wickersham then discussed language work in the grades. She pointed out the need of beginning regular systematic work on auch troublesome verbs as saw, seen, did, done, etc., in the lower grades and continuing this drill through the eight grades. She then discussed the value of art work in the grade and showed how this work could be made interest ng and instructive The subject of agriculture in the schools was then discussed by Prof, Evans. He urged the teachers to interest the boys and girls in this work and said that formerly we had been unconsciously educating from the country to the city but that now we should educate from the city to the country. OREGON TRUNK EXTENSION FROM MADRAS TO KUMATH Continued on inside page. 00- 6L Stylish Suits Made of All Wool Goods, in proper stylegive perfect satisfaction to the-weaVere-hold their shape all at modest prices. Men's Hats The Stylish Gor don Hat in fif teen different shapes for $3.00 At Other places you pay $3.50 for a hat not so good Try A GORDON i'w- Men's Shoes Oxfords in newest Tans and colors The new r-a. sit ' rutney toe. 0 Men's Shirts and Sum mer Underwear all at modest, prices. Young Men and Boys Clothing Come in and see what you can get for a small amount of mony. Boys GORDON Hats $125 and up Get the best there is for the money THE GORDON If you have not visited our Clothing Department you are not aware of the saving that awaits you. Suspenders, Hoisery, Underwear and the latest Summer Shirts all at economical figures. For Watch Repairing, Wedding Rings and Jewelry of all kinds call at our Jewelry Section ANYTHING IN JEWELRY , . 11 you are contemplating a purchase ol anything in Jewelry from . a five cent collar button to a fifteen hundred dollar diamond, let us get together and talk it over. It will be to the interest ol your pocket book to do so, both in quality and price We have recently made a large ad dition to our Jewelry Department and are showing the most beautiful designs ever brought to this market and at prices which will defy com petition. The house from whom we purchase is one ol the largest jewelers houses in the U. S. We have arranged to buy direct from them consequently We Save You the Middleman's Profit Think it Over We Have Them. II your fancy leads you to Jewelry ol the " Classic" design, we have them. II you desire a " Babylonic" setting, we show it II your tasle lies in the "Cleopatra" school we are able to show you some beautiful effects. II your ideas are along the several lines ol " Roman Empire" we can please you. II you appreciate the delicate, lacy effects of the jewelry of the "Ancient" we can show you some beauties of this old school II you prefer jewelry ol the "Old En glish" solid, massive styles, our heavily chased, hand carved designs will please you. You know our reputation lor Low Prices Genuine Qualities and Fair Dealings. C. W. ELKINS CO. -: C. W. ELKINS COMPANY :- Must Be Finished by January 1, 1911-To Cost About $4,000,000. Contract Let for 125 Miles Jsmes J. Hill's second big stride a his invasion of Central Oregon came last week with the letting of a contract for 125 miles of new rail road. II. C. Henry, of Seattle, wins the big plum at a bid supposed to be somewhere around $4,000,000 though the officials of the Oregon Trunk declare the terms of the various bids received are private, The successful contractor is prepar ed to begin grading for the exten sion, which will run from Madras to the northern boundary of the Klamath Indian Reservation, at once, ibe road is to be completed by January 1, 1011, and several thousand men will be put to work just as soon as they can be secured from the labor markets of the Coast or from the East. Contractor Henry is the man who establiehed the record for rapid railroad construction in pushing the Pacific Coast extension of the Milwaukee system through from Butte, Mont., to PugetSonnd, 1500 miles, in three years. Henry's local representatives say that they are successful in getting the number of men they want they will make another new record in build iug this second link in the Oregon Trunk. . - The contract awarded lart week is for a greater milage than that of the first section, which Porter Bros are now building from the mouth of the Deschutes River to Madras, distance of 1USJ miles, lne con struction of the line from Madras south to the reservation is not fraught with nearly so many en gineering difficulties as the initial link has been, for the road will span a broad open tableland as soon as it emerges from the Des chutes Canyon. There will be no fills or deep cuts, no expensive bridges or mountainous detours and no serious grades to climb, sn that construction will be compara tively rapid. Plans and specifications call for the same high-class standard of of construction that applies to the line in its progress from the Columbia River to Madras. At no place in the course of the 125 miles of new line will there be an adverse grade in excess of 1 per cent. One per cent is the max imum of southbound grade, while 5 per cent is the maximum adverse northbound grade. For most of the distance the moet excessive grade is around 3-10 of one per cent, There will be practically no curved worth mentioning and with the 90-pound steel and heavy rock ballasting that are required a nor mal speed of 60 miles an hour can be maintained by passenger trains. The heaviest freight trains may be moved by moderately powerful en gines without the aid of helpers. While the bridge across Crooked River is 17 miles south of Madras and would naturally be embraced in the contract for the ne exten sion, it is not included. This struc ture will be erected by the Oregon Trunk people themselves. The railroad company will also lay its own steel and is preparing to follow closely at the heels of the graders It is a wonderfully resourceful country which the new line will tap and it is for that reason that the Hill people desire to be the first on the ground. From Mad rap, the line will run to Redmond, the next important town in the in terior, passing, however, through a number . of thriving townsites which have sprung up since James gon. ibe most Important town on the entire line from the present northern terminus to the southerly end of the extension that will be tapped is Bend. The Oregon Trunk already owns considerable property in and around Bend and affiliated corporations are building sawmills for the purpose of work ing up the many billions of feet of timber immediately adjacent to the town. The mammoth D. I. P. irrigation project will be tapped by the new extension and direct access to a hues empire of unde veloped agricultural and grazing ands will be afforded, to say noth ing of furnishing an outlet for the vast Weyerhaeuser timber holdings in the Klamath country. There are more than 20,000,000,000 feet of sugar and yellow pine tributary to the Klamath country, enough to make 100 carloads a day1 for more 100 years. Lava, Roeland, Odell and Cres cent will be other centers of popu lation, which the new Hill line will pass through, but perhaps more important than all of these will be the fact that the road will pass within 10 or a doien miles of that grandest of all grand Oregon scenic regions, the Crater Lake Reservation. At the Oregon Trnnk offices it was announced that the second link of the line would conform in every way with the h:gh-grade con struction of the 109 miles. It was further stated that the contractors will lose oot a moment's time in putting as many camps into the field as they can establish with a full quota of men and teams: Ad vantage is to be taken of the sum mer weather and while January 1 is the date fixed for the completion of the job, the officials rather ex pect that the , line will be opened to the Klamath reservation before that time. vwin me two contracts now awarded, Mr. Hill tinder the di rection of John F. Stevens the head of the Oregon Trunk, will have 235 miles of road through the state by the beginning of next year. He will also have spent by that time something like $12,000,' 000 for construction work in this state in is months, inis is ex clusive of the $1,500,000 stee! bridge across the Columbia hook ing up the Oregon Trunk with the North Bank for the purpose of di rect physical connections with Portland for Pacific Coast-deep-water terminals and for through route to the East via Spokane. hq a norde ol surveyors now operating along the Klamath In dian Reservation pushing thei way southward toward Klamath Falls, the gateway to California, and with preliminary reconnais sance work done from Bend 150 miles eastward toward Burns and the Harney Valley, the inference is plain that more construction work will be undertaken by the Oregon Trunk long before the pros ent contracts have been completed Telegram. CIRCUIT COURT IN SESSION C. SAM SMITH CASE CONTINUED Notice to Creditors. Notice Is herenr riven bv the undersigned. the administrator of the estate of Hariet B. M&ben. deceased, to all creditors of and all persona having claims aialnst said deceased to present the same with the proper vouoli- rs, to toe undersigned, at me omoe or Elliott In Prineville, Oregon, within si months from the Drat publication of this notloe. Dated this 31st duv ot Aorll. 1810. John Maisn. Administrator of the estate of Hariet B, Maben, deceased. Grand Jury Finishes Its Labors. long List of Civil Cases Disposed Of Other Notes. Circuit court convened Monday with Judge Brad sh aw, presiding. IHstrlct Attorney Wilson was on band to personally look after cases coming under big Jurisdiction. The grand Jury was selected and sworn In Monday. The following are the names of those that eom- poeed It: A. W. Brown ot Helsler. foreman ; C. F. Smith, Prineville; S. 8. Stearns, Prineville; J. F. Blanchard, Prineville; C. W. E. Foote. Madras; Henry Tweet, Bend; C. R. Henry, Paulina. The grand jury finished its labors Wednesday evening. Its time was taken np largely with matters that properly belong to the Incorporated towns making the complaints. The grand Jury took the stand that where a municipality has the power to correct Its own evils the taxpayers of the county at large should not be burdened with the additional ex pense. Madras has a number ot bawdy houses that certain of its citizens want driven out. They applied to the county authorities and these in turn presented the matter to the grand Jury with the result already indicat ed. Its a pretty good principle to establish. Other lncoporated towns will know Just what to do. They must correct their own evils or suffer them to exist so far as the county at large is concerned. The grand jury's report is us follows: Prineville, Ore., May 4, 1910. Hon. H. L,. Bradsbay, Circuit Judge. . We, the grand Jury, hnpanneled at the May (1910) term of the Circuit Court of the state of Oregon, for Crook county, beg leave to report as follows: We have been In session three da; a and bave returned one true bill and eight not true bills. We have had a large number of witnesses appear , before us upon many matters and have given our most careful at tention to all complaints of every kind made to our body, some ot which are mentioned In this report. A great deal ot attention has been given to a petition signed by some ot the citizens of Madras, reciting that certalu evils exist there and asking that the grand Jury seek to eliminate them. Upon Investigating we find that Madras Is an incorpor ated city and that municipal ordi nances are in force providing for the punishment of people operating the establishments complained of. We also find that the municipality of Madras employs a marshal and nlghtwatchman at a salary of $75 per month each and further that there has been paid into'' the city treasury of Madras from April 12, 1910, until the end of that month, the sum ot $723. - Under these circumstances this grand Jury be lieved that this matter Is one that should be left to the Jurisdiction ot the city government of Madras, and that the taxpayers of the county at large should not be called upon to bear the burden of what is within the jurisdiction of a municipality. This conclusion applies not only to the city of Madras but to all munici palities within Crook county. We say this not In any spirit of criticism Continued on Inside Page I 'rv a I s-fcyy equally valuable saving. Forv making line, rich or plain fa ( Indispensable For Home Baking J. Hill began his invasion of Ore