Journal COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER, $1.50 YEAR PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1911. ntri at th pnmlntnm t Pr1nTllt Ormmf aa aeound-claaa matter VOLXV-NO. 15 Crook County SUMMER SCHOOL AT PRINEVILLE Will Be Held Earlier This Year. A CHANCE IN SCHOOL LAW Requires Earlier Examination! Teachers, this U Your Opportunity. County 8uptrlnUndent R. A. Ford in planning lo holt the An mini Hummer School in I'rititiville if a suHicieiit number o( tvttchora will la in attendance lo warrant liiii tilting ro. Mr. IS. L. Cup, principal of tbi Crook County High School, Mm. K. I.. Walker, head ol the Normal Department, am Mini Rora It. I'arrott, Instructor in English, will have charge nil will give thorough review in all branches required (or both the one-year and the Ove-yesr slate certificates, A class in methods will be form ed and 10 per cent credit will be given (or work done in this elm. Hpccial work in handwork will be given to thane desiring it. Owing to the (art that the time lor holding teachers' examinations has been changed Irom the second Wednesday In August end Febru ary to the third Wednesday in June and December ol each year, the Hummer School will begin Monday, May 29, and continue un til the time out (or the examina tion, June 21. The tuition will be 15.00. All teacher will have access to the libraries of the High School and the Normal department. Hoard und room may be had at reason able rates. It is hoped that a large number of teachers and students will be in attendance. The instructors wish lo orgnnixe their classes Saturday, May 27. Is is earnestly ho.ed that all who expect to attend till be on hand (or the first meeting of the classes. Certificates The next exami nation will be held on June 21, '22, 2.'; and 24. There will U no examination in August, hence all persons whose certificates expire in August, or who wish to take teachers' examinations in order to tench next year should write at the June examination. The new law does away with county cert ill cales on stats grades until May 20. Under the present law appli cant must complete the subjects for a state certificate within three successive examinations. The new law provides that such perrons may complete their examinations under the laws now in force. All persons, therefore, who are writing for Slate certificates should appear at the June examination. Applicants for a one-year Slate certificate must make a general average of not less than 76 per cent and shall not fall below CO er csnt in any one of the follow ing subjects: Writing, arithmetic, civil government, geography, gram mar, history, orthography, physi cal geography, reading, school law, and theory and practice of teach ing. Applicants (or a five-year State certificate must make a general average of not less than 85 per oentand shall not fsll below 70 per cent In any of the following subjects: Writing, orthography, arithmetic, physiology, grammar, geography, theory and practice of teaching, U. 8. history, civil gov ernment, school law, psychology, American literature, algebra, phy sical geography and composition. Twelve months experience in leaching is required for this psMr. Applicants for a Life State cer tificate must make a general aver age of not less than 85 er cent and shall not fsll below 75 per cent in any of the following sub jects: Arithmetic, writing, ortho graphy, reading, physiology, Amer ican literature, English literature, school luw, civil government, gram mar, geography, theory and prac tice of teaching, U. 8. history, psychology, algebra, physical geography, plane geometry, botany, physics, book-keeping, composition, general history, geology and his tory of education. Six months' teaching experience is required (or this paper. Applicants (or primary five-year State certificate must make a gen eral average of not less than 85 per cent and shall not fall below 70 per csnt Id any ol tbs following subjects: Methods in reading, methods in arithmetic, methods in language, methods in geography, theory and practice of teaching, writing, orthography, physiology, psychology and in addition thereto shall write a thesis on an educa tional subject selected from a list prepared by the Superintendent of Public Instruction. Twelve months' teaching experience is re quired for this paper which gives the applicant authority to leach only in the first, second and third grades. No examination In English classic! will be required in the June examination on account of the lack of time for annousements and preparation. All examina tions will be based on the text books adopted by the State Text Book commission. Yours very truly, It. A. Fom. High School Will Debate Baker City Crook County High School will meet Baker City in the inter-high school debate at the latter city March 81. The question to be de bated is, Resolved, that the nations of the world reduce their arma ment to the minimum necessary (or police protection." The Crok county team is com posed o(. Miss Kthel Klann, Clar ence Rice and Van Brink. Mis I'arrott will accompany the team on its trip to Baker. Ladies ! qCall and see the beautiful spring Dress Goods. Just opened up several cases of the best patterns of this season, including Ginghams, Mercerized Fabrics and Silks. 1$ Are you tired of buying "Bum" Hosiery? We do not sell socalled "Guaranteed" Hose. We do make a specialty of "Armorplate." Hundreds of happy people wear "Armorplate" goods and find them best. Try one pair, 25c; 3 pair for $ 1 .00 grades. Children's size 1 5c, 22 I -2c, 25c, and 3 pair for $1 The Drill with a record. Sizes 1 0, 1 2 and 1 6 Disc. Get our prices on these Drills, and also on the Oliver Plows the best plows built. Especially adapted to Central Oregon Soil. Coffins W. Elkins. Prineville, Oregon. Prineville, the Best Town In Central Oregon The Reasons Why Prinenlle is the county seat of Crook County, Or.; courthouse of native stone, is the best in the state and cost $100,(100. Prinerill is the best home town in the interior. Prineville is situated St the confluence of the Oehoro and Crooked rivers and McKay creek, and has a natural water grade from a territory sixty mil-s square. Prieerill C.Mirriil Clh is ready to help you. Coll at their rooms. Always welcome. Prineville has the best high school in the state. Occupies s $25,000 brick building; teachers receive better salaries than in any school in the state out side of Portland. Prineville school district has let a contract for a $26,000 public school building (brick) that will con tain nine recitation rooms and will be completed in September, 1911. Prineville City Council will build a $10,000 (brick) city hall this year. Prineville property is and a ways has been a good investment. Prineville has Several hundred thousand acres of free government land tri butary to the city. Prineville will be connected with the main line of the Oregon Trunk as soon as the surveys now under way are completed. Prineville is the locatisn of the principal office of the Oregon & Western Colonization company that has 340,000 acres of land in Crook county for sale; also many desirable lots in Prineville. Prineville has six billion feet of yellow pine tim ber adjacent that will eventually be cut here. Prineville banks have deposits of $800,000, and have the best bankiag houses in the interior. Prineville bas sixty business houses and twenty professional men. Prineville is the location of the head offices of the Deschutes National Forest Prineville is the home of the central offices of the two principal telephone lines in interior Oregon. Prineville Baptists are building a large stone church. Prineville Methodists and Presbyterians each have commodious new churches. Prinenlle Union Church building accommodates all church organizations, of which there are several, that have no building of their own. . Prineville Masons and Odd Fellows each own their own buildings. Prineville has large active lodges of Odd Fellows, Masons, Modern Woodmen, Artisans, Owls and other fraternal organizations. Prineville has more brick and stone buildings than all the other towns in Central Oregon put together. Prineville has the best auto garage and machine shop in the interior. Prineville has more first-class farm land tributary than any other interior town. PriervilU will grade many streets this year. Prineville has the best hotel accommodations in Central Oregon. Prineville can be reached from Madras by auto for $5; by stage for $2.50. Prineville has the only creamery in Central Ore gon, and receives cream from and ships butter and ice cream to all parts of the interior. PriKvillc has more fine homes, more shady streets than any other town in the interior. PriMvilk will welcome you as a citizen, no matter what your line. PriMTille has a complete electric light and city water system. Prineville planing mills and shingle mills are modern and up-to-date. Prianillt Flouring Mills are the largest and best equipped mills in the interior. PrintTille merchants carry large stocks of goods of every kind and will treat you right He Should . Come to Prineville L. II. Weir ot Cincinnati, who is one of the field secretaries of the Play-ground Association of Amer ica, is visiting a large number of cities and towns along the Pacific coast for the purpose of creating more interest in parks and play grounds. He thinks Portland has one of the best systems in the United States, but he thinks more grounds should be acquired. It seems Portland realizes this fact for at a recent Board meeting ad ditional lots were authorized to be purchased for the use of play grounds for the schools. There are many people in Prineville who appreciate . the value of larger play grounds and just now is the time to get others interested so that something definite may be done along this line before the new school house is built. If satisfactory arrange ments could be made whereby the present school site could be ex changed for the park it would af ford ample room for play grounds and give the city a park nearer the center of the town. A beauti GREAT RUSH OF H0MESEEKERS Trains Running in Two and Three Sections. PLENTY OF ROOM OUT HERE present school site and with trees, flowers, lawn, grandstand, etc. Prineville would have a park near at hand where all could enjoy it. Good Drill for . the Grade Pupils In order to create a greater in terest in literature and give the pupils' practice in Bpeaking the students ot the sixth, seventh and eighth grades bave regular literary exercises every two weeks. Every pupil appears on the program once each month. Following is the program given last Friday: Declamation Pete Harris. Impromptu ' Ce n t r a 1 Oregon Railway. What it means to us Hobart Belknap. Debate "Will the Coal in the United States Hold Out?" Rit Powell, Lota Ilorrigan. Essay "Grant" Harry Stearns. Recitation Harry Farnsworth. Monologue Golda Cleek. Oration Mabel Slayton. Talk Some book I have read Audry Noble. Lost. Silvor "Waltham Traveller" watch on short leather strap, in Prineville, March it. Keward on return to owner. Crook County Can Provide Homes for Thousands Come and See. For the first (our days colonists began to arrive in Oregon the total number of new population bas passed the 7000 mark, says the Telegram. Regular trains leaving Middle West gateways are running in two and three sections and special col onist trains are being rushed west ward as rapidly as possible. The temporary accommodations (or the new arrivals at the Union Depot are overtaxed, and efforts are be ing made by the traveling repre sentatives of the different lines to route the bomeseekers to their des tinations without the necessity of stopping off at Portland, which is receiving about 80 per cent o( the Oregon movement of newcomers. Instructions are being wired from here to the Eastern represen tatives of the railroads to arrange, if possible, to have all colonists to go directly to the country where they expect to make their future homes in order to facilitate the handling of the additional traffic, but there is not much chance that the movement can be diverted to any considerable extent, for the reason that the majority of the Oregon-bound crowds have long since selected their routing and destination. The movement is keeping np at a pace that has exceeded every es timate even of the most optimistic prophets, and the railroads are up against the problem of making the best of the onrush. From the scattering reports re ceived from selling points of the different roads, Oregon will receive more new colonists this spring than all the Northwestern and Coast States combined. Arrangements have been com pleted for the organization of two excursion parties a month, starting from St. Paul on the first and tbird Tuesdays. The passenger list for the train of March 21 is filled already, and many are sign ing for the trips beginning April 4, April 18, May 2 and May 16. From 200 to 250 people will be carried on every train. These parties are organized en tirely independent of the colonist traffic which the Great Northern is handling under separate depart ments. Round-trip tickets are sold to patrons of these tours at a very low rate, the price from Chicago being $57.50, from St. Paul, Minneapolis, Dululh, Su perior and common points, 152.50, and from other towns on the East ern end of the road, a correspond ing low figure. These prices are approximately one fare plus $2 50 for the round trip. Hakes Home Baking Easy JJ Ho Absolutely Pure The only baking powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar NO alum.no lime phosphate ful park could be made of the J. S. rox, Prineville, Or. lt-pd