i Grook . County ouroai COUNT OFFICIAL PAPER, $1.50 YEAR PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, JAN. 5, 1911. Entrr1 at the ptmtntnm at Prlmrvlll Oregon, aa ooond-ciM nuiur VOL. XV-NO. 4 RED-HOT BASKET BALL GAME Kough-House in borne Places. PRINEVILLE 25, REDMOND 14 Tho Best and Hardest Fought Gamo Ever Played in Prineville. rrlnevillc 25, It.nl mond 14. Tho hotteet bakctball game ever played In Prineville took place Saturday evening at the Club hall. Tho Kama was fnsl anj furious at all tlngee. It was no "tldilln-de-winka" gams, either. There waa a little rough-house in certain parts hut not enough to mar the pleasure (jf witnessing the atruugle "between two evenly mulched team ol crack haxktithall players. l'rinevillc started off with a rush and fairly allot here J Redmond in the first ball with lightning pa Keen and accurate banket throwing. The neons stood Prineville 11, Hed niond 5. Itoth tea ui lined up for the second half with a determination to win the game, Redmond here showed her bent team work during the game and worked the hall V ig n The Ml JSC, down the floor and into the banket three timea, making the score board read 11 all. Then the prac tice and endurance of Ellis' proteg overpowered Redmond and it wai I'rinvillc'i game all the rent of the way. Ilowman starred for Prineville, eluding hit guard and ahooting five goa'.i from the field, besides making Prineville'. onry free throw. Hi playing undoubtedly won the game. "Shorty" Foster wat there with hia bard clean game that baa made him the best basketball player on the Pacific coaat. llewett played a strong floor game for Redmond. Ilia team wai greatly handicapied by the absence of Foote, their 230-pound guard, who wai unable to make tbe trip. Hoy Brewster, of Prine ville, who waa living in Redmond when the game waa scheduled bad agreed to play with them and did o Saturday evening. In the future he will line up on tbe Prineville aide. Eliis and Brew iter found it very bard to get into the game for fear of crippling each other to that they could not get into the Prlneville-llend football game next Saturday. Hie line-up of the teami is aa aa follow? : Prineville Redmond fcllia . lull forward Oumm Ikiwinan . .. rllil (orwani 0. Ilrewaier Hliortv". renter timet ItreliU'll Mt gnar.l Ilrantly It. Mil alllattir . ...r guard... K. Hrawaler Held I u knla 1 'r i nev I Il K I Ua Bowman 6. rotter 3. McCalliater ltilm ili.l llnwnlt 2, It. llrrwater 4. Kre throw- llowiiien 1, (in una i. Kwleree II. Ilalilwiii. Vnipire Shipley. Time ol halve 15 minute. Sales and No Profit Cutting out the profit in order to sell Winter Goods is the ''Slogan" of our January Clearance Sale ! ! This may not appear like profitable business but it enables us to get money to buy Spring Goods. The Wide Swath we are cutting in our line of Men's Clothing shows wider every day. Suits $5.75 and up. Young Men's Suits, $4.25 and up. Boy's Knee Pant Suits, $1.25 and up. Any how, come in and see our suits. Men's Hats. 50 cents, What are we doing Children's Shoes, 50 Cents and and Ladies' $2.50 Shoes $ 1 .00. you for $1.50 and $2.80. Men's High Top Shoes at a LADIES:Thisisthe time in the year to get sewing done. , Get your Suitings and Ginghams here. Have you seen our worsted dress goods at 22 1-2 cents, 30c, 42 1-2 cents. Why not? Outing Flannels, Extra Heavy, 12 yards at $1.15. 35c Yarns at 22 1 -2 c 35c Hose, 20 and 25c C. W. Elkins Company. FOOTBALL NEXT SATURDAY Prineville and Bend to Settle Championship. TEAMS EVENLY MATCHED Cet Out and Root for the Boya They'll Need it Before Came i Over. Pr'neville and Bend will settle tbe Central Oregon football championabip next Saturday at thia place. There will lie a bot time. The no-score game at ISend December 20 allows that tbe big fellows from the Deacbutea know the game. Itotb sides are strength ening their lineupa. The famous "Nig" Pringle will direct tbe Band team at quarter back, and Dr. Cue, sn old college star, will play fullback. Tbe Prineville team, with the exception of a few changes in the line, will practically be the fame that put up such a bard fight at Bend. The ltend team baa a good sprinkling of ex-college players and outweigh the Prineville boys, but tbe Utter team bas a fast back and up. Caps, 10, 15 in Shoes-Every Pair Reduced up. Your Choice of Dozens of Pairs of Misses Ask to see "Shoes" and see what we can get 1 -v Big Bargain. field besides a good variety of for ward passes and on-side kicks that will open up tbe game and make it a good one from the spectators' point cf view. As this will be tbe last game to be played in Prine ville this winter a big crowd should La out to root for the borne team. Tbe Prineville lineup is as fol lows: Thompson, center; Quinn and Barnes, guards; McMahan and McCalliater, tackles; Lowther and Coe, ends; Brewster and licchtel, bai (backs; Collin, quarter; Ellis, fullback. Fancy Chickens. C. E. Shaffer, proprietor of the Clover Leaf Ranch at Fort Rock, was in Prinevil'e tbe last of the week on bis return from Sbaniko, wbere be had been for a shipment of fine chickens for his ranch. Among tbe lot were Silver Spangle llamburghs, Buff Orping tons, Plymouth Rocks and Golden Wyandotte. Most of the birds were shipped from a poultry breeder at Des Moines, Iowa, and are some of tbe lest chickens ever received in this country. Mr. Scbafer bas over 100 full bloods on his Clover Leaf ranpb, and expects to add to tbe number. He comes to Oregon from Ohio, wbere be sold large poultry farm. Horses to Winter. Good bay, feed yard, and running watur. Eight mile south weat of Prine ville on lmonla road. Terma, V per head per month. Otto Borraon. 11-22 tt and 25c. THIS COUNTRY SEEN FROM WHEEL Bicyclist Impressed by Its Magnitude. FINDS LOTS OF VACANT LAND The Industrious Homesteader Made to Feel at Home. Randall R. Howard, a Prineville boy, made a bicycle trip through Central Oregon and writes to the Pacific Monthly of tbe " Present and Future of Eastern Oregon. He says: "Tbe Eastern Oregon visitor is sometimes impressed with the great amount of apparently waste land that he must traverse be tween tbe towns and the chief settlements. It should not be de nied that there is much waste land in Eastern Oregon. Compara tively, there is much waste land in iff .- tie 4 ,,4-f J , t Some Prineville Homea. Ohio, and Pennsylvania, and in tbe New England Stales, of about tbe same area. Also the slow moving Eastern Oregon traveler often forgets the waste areas that he is whisked through on the train in other parts of the West. And much depends on the point of view. I met a weary, dilapidated bomeseeking outfit that bad come from the humid Willamette Valley a distance half as far as from New York to Chicago, who said they were "going back to the road" because they couldn't find any open land with running water on it. The man from the humid section is often disappointed at first with tbe semi-arid Eastern Oregon. Street Scene This big inland area was first of all a stock country; and years ago the cattle kings and tbe sheep barons hunted out and gained possession of practically all the running water, that they might control the range. Hence nearly all of the Govern ment lnd in Eastern Oregon is open to entry under the 320-acre Homestead Law, a first provision of which is that the land be semi arid and non-irrigible. It Bhould not be forgotten, however, that much of the recently taken and the still open homestead land in East ern Oregon may, in the coming day of cheaper fuel, be irrigated by pumping plants. A late report from the Department of Interior classifies the open land in Crook county as follows: One-tenth mountainous, two-tenths agri cultural, seven-tenths grazing. The Eastern Oregon homesteader must be a man of firmness and vision, ss have been tbe home steaders ol the past. He is often a former city resident ; one woman settler along my route stating that he 'had never before lived in a smaller place than Paris." Oc casionally a "city" homesteader will be attracted by a fine-looking level plain, only to discover after two or three years of hardship that be is located on a shallow, alkali Oat. After tbe worst bas been said, however, it should be stated that there are still some thousands of acres of open land in Eastern Oregon. This land is all far in land, chiefly in Southern Crook, Northern Lake. Harney and Mai j heur counties. Hundreds of set tlers bave located during tbe past two years along the promised east-and-west railways. The counties of Eastern Oregon are so vast that the residents, even the county officials, do not know them and often bave never crossed the extreme boundaries. We were met by a procession of Lomeeetkers, speculators, investors, capitalists, traveling in covered wagons, sometimes rickety and worn; somo were leading pack horsee; and I met one wooden legged man with a great load on his back. The etages are crowded n 4' aid loaded down with baggage and express. At Sbaniko, the present railway termini s for all this part of Eastern Oregon, men were beg ging to ride through the cold nigbt on top of the swaying four and six horse stage coaches; and three times tbe number of freighters an J stages could not have emptied the bulging and overflowing ware houses. Also hundreds are being taken into Eastern Oregon on stage automobiles. New towns are jumping up ahead of the southward-pushing Hill and Harriman railways, and others are yet to be thought out. As I passed one of these towns was heralding itself from a pine tree, in the form in Prineville. of a neat little signboard telling the name of itself and two of its chief streets to be. Having passed Lava Butte crater one of the most recent lava flows in the United States, we are in the Deschutes River Valley country, a rich and most promis ing section with an altitude of from 2,000 to 3,000 feet. At the upper end of the Deschutes River Valley, which in the pre-irrigation days was called "the desert," is the town of Bend. . .. Among the other established towns in the Upper Deschutes country are Redmond and Prine ville. Redmond is one of the novelty towns of the Northwest. Five years ago there were only five families within a radius of fifteen miles, and not a single human habitation nearer than five miles. Even four years ago one must travel for miles and ..... .v . r . . . Continued on last page. OLD COUNCIL WINDS UP BUSINESS Leaves Good Record Behind. On FINANCES IN GOOD SHAPE The New Gty ; Council Sworn in Last Monday Even ing. The council met Monday nigbt for the finishing of the year's busi ness, and in order to turn over the affairs of tbe city to the new coun cil. Present Mayor Stewart, Conn- cilmen Rosenberg, Yancy, 8hipp, Lafollette, Noble and Lippman. The report of G. W. Noble on tbe special work done on the west end of Second street was read and ap proved. The bills for the work were ordered paid, and a vote of thanks was tendered Mr. Noble for the interest shown in tbe work of graveling and leveling this street. The report of C. E. Smith, city treasurer, was very complete. It 'hows every transaction made through that office during the year. Mayor Stewart recommended new city hall for Prineville, and the purchase of two chemical engines for the fire companies. In bis report submitted to the council Monday night, a balance of $4,040.81 was shown to be in the treasurer's bands on the first day of the year, and with tbe additional 10 tnilt tax'which was "voted in December, there will be ample funds for some of the improve ments whiih were recommended by by the Mayor. He stated further that there is no place for the safe keeping of the city records, and that a new ball should be built with" a vault big enough to pro tect them properly. ' Tbe treasurer's report shows a total of 110,437.81 received by that office during the year 1910. All bills have been paid nd the out standing warrants, of which there are $800 worth, have been called for. The report of the finance com mittee made by chairman J. B. Shipp, shows a cash balance, with the amount of the bills paid at the Monday night meeting deducted, in the hands of tbe new adminis tration. The amount is $3,384.82 as contrasted with $399.97 which was the total of funds on hand by the council one year ago. The annual report of Marshal Kelso shows a total of $104 col lected from dog tax; $206.40 from water rents; and $254 from road tax, and $5 received from renting the road grader for one day. He made 38 arrests during the year. The total receipts of bis office were $669.40 or $69.40 more than the salary paid him by the city. The report of R. W. Bieese, re corder, shows that a total of $5,- 550.78 passed through his hands during the year, the largest item of Continued on last page. Absolutely Pure The only baking powdor mado from Royal Crapo Cream of Tartar mm