Mowers If Makft Home Canning a Pleasure I The only jar in tlio world that Usrt No Rubber Rint i lwrui Keepe til Vf tetanies, Fruit , Mini, Pith, tio. ,parfef ly forever, AirllnhhSrlf-Stalint Sanitary No Scrtw Cap ORDER A DOZEN TODAY The LOCAL MENTION John C'urtii left for Portland lat Wedhnnday. l K Hmmu left Sunday tor Burn (or snouting of two or three weeks. T. M. Itnldwin returned Salur (Ivy. 11a inhtilated two lodges w hi In sway. Ilev, Bailey preached at New som creek last Sunday, lie reports gotnl meeting. Married At the Baptist pwnn age in this city, July 13, Nicholas J. I'oisy slid ld Water. The csrHntcr are pushing work on the new Baptist church t-o to have it ready for dedication Octo- her 1st. U. V. White! of The Dulles mini' in Tuesday evening to attend the marring' of his sister, Miss Flossie, lie will visit for a few days before returning. Union Church services: 10 a. m. liiblti School. 11 a. in. preaching. 8 p. ni., preaching by the pastor, A cordial welcome is extended to all. C. P. ltailey, pastor. Thn cement work on the new school building has been finished. The bricklayers' commenced work Tuesday and will rusn the work as fast as the brick can be burned. l)r. Rosenberg reports one death from sunstroke, lie was called to the Deschutes canyon to attend John I'lagg, railroad laborer, but the man was beyond help. Ho died July 10. Married Miss Flosrie Whiteis and Ellis C. Shepherd were married Wednesday morning at 8 o'clock at the home of the bride's parents at l'rineville. Uev. Huggins per forming the ceremony. After a wedding breakfast the youngcouple left for the home on Hear Creek, where the groom hoe a ranch. H. A. Trose has a little Jorsoy not three years old that has had three calves. Mr. Prose thougt this was a pretty good record until the Moro Observer man stated that the cham pion producer lived in Sherman County. A cow over there had five calves in two years. It first had twins and then triplets. Prinevillo has arranged a series of ball names with the O.-W. R. N. (rays, the champions of the Wil lamette valley, to be pulled off July 29 and 30. One game will be played Saturday afternoon at 2:30 and two on Sunday one at 10 a. in., and one at 2:30 p. m. It ib thought the l'rineville boys can give the redoubtable champions from the west side all they want. J. H. llaner, firo warden for Crook County, returned last Friday morning from the north of Tumalo Creek on the weBt side, where he was lighting a forost fire with a gang of 25 men. The fire covered about 3000 acres but did slight damage. About 2 per cent., Mr. llaner thinks. The fire was put out Thursday night and the crew laid off. It was caused by a care less sheep herder who failed to properly cover his fire. 23 The self-dump, iteel McCormick rakei re made for Service. Will outwear two ordinary rakes. Easily Operated. W. F. King Co. Farm Implement of all Dan McMillan is in Portland on a business trip, Horn July 11, to the wife of I!. D. Ketehuro, a boy, Warren Crooks is taking in the big Potliilch ut Seattle. L. C, Perry is visiting his daugh ter, Mrs. Shipp, In Portland, Carl It. Meyer arrived here Inst Sunday night from Portland and is working at the Journal ollice. Miss Kdith Uice came in from Portland last evening on a visit to her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Kiee. Andrew Noble has bought the Sam Collins place a mile below town. The family will move out in September. John Kuhn, who lives on the south fork of the John Day Kiver, loaded out of l'rineville Monday with a six-horse team of supplies. Albert K Scott left the Inst of the week for a visit of six weeks in !-catt ami Auburn. asti. lie will take in the big Potlatch in Seattle. II. A Wright of Kast Portland, a brother-in-law of Dr. Edwards, has been visiting in l'rineville. He left for home the fiirst part of the week. W. C. Congleton, Sam Douthit, and Frank Post brought in a bunch of cattle Monday and sold them to Fred Stroud. Mr. Stroud will ship to Portland. K. A. Hamilton of Lamonta was in town on business yesterday, lie says that is needed over his way. The hot winds of last Friday, Sat urday and Sunday fairly cooked things. Hillman has made a move to change its name. It wants to be called Smith rock. The unpleasant notoriety of the Seattle promoter of that name is the reason for the change. There will be two especially in teresting services at the Methodist church next Sunday. At 11 o'clock, following a union rally of all Sunday Schools in the city, Mrs. H. P. Belknap will Bpeak on "My Impression of the Recent World's Sunday School Conven tion." In the evening at 8 o'olock the pastor will give an address on "The Rubaiyat Versus the Bible," You are invited to attend. Ex cellent music has been prepared. Jeff Stewart of Post who has been laid up with spotted fever, was able to go home Sunday. George Nobel took biro home in his new car. When Mr. Noble wanted to return to l'rineville, the pesky car wanted to stay at the Stewart place. George turned every buzz-fuzzing thing that would turn but it was of no use. He oranked until the perspi ration rolled down his face but there wasoting doing. It happen ed that Dr. Kdwards was over on Beaver Creek with his car out ol commission. The Doctor hired a team to haul his car to where the Noble auto had .bucked and it took about four seconds to start it. With the Edwards car in tow they started for l'rineville. The doctor broke an axle in crossing a ditch. kinds LOCAL MENTION Porn July 13, to the wife of Mike Itrown, a girl, Horn July 8, to the wife of George Antoin, a boy. Miss Alwilda Wilson left Wed nesday for Albany to visit friends. C. C. O'Neil was up from Lone Dine (lap yusterday on business. Mrs. Robert Zeverly has gone to Mill Creek to visit relatives for a month. Mrs. John Newson of Walla Walla Wash, is visiting relatives in l'rineville. Mrs. P.. V. Roberts of Portland i visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Cantrill. Mr. C. X. Vanderpool of Ren ton County, is visiting his brother Med Vanderpool ot this city. Mr. Fogg, postmaster at Hamp' ton, passed through l'rineville to' day on his way from the railroad (ieorge W. Mills of Paulina came down for supplies and hay hands the first of the week. Haying will he ;n full blast in a few days in that pari of Crook county. Letter List HeninlnliiK uiiculled for In the l'rineville otllee for the month ending July 15, tail. Mr IlKMIm Mi'Ni-ly Mm N KUillrell Mm Jnlinn Joner M m W ' Jon,- Mm Kilcly M I'lurk Mrtt Hlnr Bwmle Mm Frank l Bowwct Mix Krtuxt'ft Cooke Mm K I' Kills MIkn R'nlt Cunning Mm N K CoMlvll MtH Mtiry Harbor H t'lirUI'un .hikobwll Mr H H Kris Aleonsor Mm Aim t'arlnleiW CJ) Mrs W llllttm CurlKou MIW4 Miui,rll Kerry Mr it li AunIIii Mr W H rViiKim MrK llimii tt lilts Mr Mlunle Nm-k Mtxtt Anna Annie S II Tlmmliwm 'i K I O N. nl Arllmr MirtiunliKH AH MeUimless M run Jimt'K Ht'-'l tlnt1r tat Mr Mmu J MiSoy nrl .Mnrton A K IHinli-lft Hurry A IihvIh W II Hims. H M Irelan 1 mille Fender lien Dlxtm Arlliur.loneil Gun Hubtnmm .liwpll .Mueller H K WoltHitt Wesley Htephengon James A Hrueo Charley K Haker Fay V Combs Kulw lay lluel binder Jum'ih M llmiy l'alrlek HastlnK LIIh- Hms (i BHmllh (loo " lllhiuu J I) Nellay A H Hudson T H Jones Frank Vi llllams Fhlllp Urntt Cay W tlson F Cross Tliw Join A W llnvll Tito KiwIoN IVrrv Kiululi A J fHvki'r (M l,tvtlt'y 2 A H Tliuntnell K.lwln W U., (J Ham Sti,hHHB William "lorly Andrew Hnnm Albert ('unny l,tuml K ('rows A J Ih'Cki'l I'liaK HujKlntmlhnm li rlarntw Itco Mtirrlwm Krank illlHina 2 l-rank n llainx s Western Kleolrtc Oo M I, Hrown van A Jones llerinvn Caldwell K I, .ItihnHtin Cliarlte 1'url A 11 furilur LOiilrlon Will Lkdfouii, P. M. A Happy Retort. The niotto of the amateur actor, ac cording to Seymour llleks In his auto biography, Is that "It Is bettor to have hnd a frost than never to have played at all." On this subject he quotes a hnppy retort of Sir W. S. Gilbert's. "What do you think of our amateur club?" suld an euthusmst. "I think they are not so much a club as a bun dle ot sticks," suld the muster of rep artee. A Waterfall In tha Air. On the roud to the roll from Hono lulu, in Hawaii, Is a waterfall that never reaches land. A thread of wa ter leaps from the cliff a thousand feet lu the ulr, but before It can gather force, nud carry Itself to tlio bottom of the declivity tlio hungry northwest wind, hurtling through the pass, picks up the streamlet and wafts It away lu wist. New York World. 0 Ths Moba In Servia. Servian peasants help each other by means of au Institution known as the niobn. A man who hus not hands suf ficient to plow or reap his farm calls In the moba that Is to any, Invites all his neighbors to come and help him. He pays nothlug for this service, pro viding only generous supplies of food and drink, but when any of them ap ply for the moba It la understood that he will take bis turn. Improvement are made on the McCormick mower every year. The old mow er was a good machine, but the improved this year's model is still better. The aim of the McCor mick factory is to put a machine on the market that has THESE 1WO QUALITIES Durability Light -Running LOCAL MENTION. Cbas. II. Proetz and family re moved this week into the Grand mu Stewart residence. About 750,O(JO pounds of wool were disposed of at the sealed- bid sales held at Lakeview last week. Thermometers all over Prine viile soared above the 100 mark Friday, Saturday and Sunday, some showing as high as 10G. The government instrument nt the Club, however, failed to go higher than 97 on either day, and there are some who regard that thermometer as a false alarm County Judge H. C. Ellis and W. F,. Guerin were over from Bend on business the first of the week. Mr. Guerin, who was a former resident of Bend but has spent the last four years in Ohio, has only lately arrived at Bend. He will be in the county all sum mer. J. M. Weir ho has been an attache of the Review office for the past two months, left Tues day for the Paulina country where he expects to find a home stead and permanently locate, Mr.' Weir was raised in Florida, which state he was at last com pelled to forsake because of ill health. The Oregon Trunk Railway on Monday began the construction of a sixteen-stall roundhouse at Metolius, which sets at rest all doubts as to Metolius being division point. The company is also installing an 80 foot turn table and a fuel oil storage tank the dimensions being 20x00 feet and the capacity 10,000 barrels Lake county has several arte sinn wells, all of which are flow xne- One valley has wells at from 122 to 260 feet deep and other valleys have strong flows where wells have been driven In one instance the water pours from a well that was driven only 30 feet. Crook county ha9 no artesian water. Twenty-three thousand acres of fine agricultural lands were opened to entry July 12 in Lake county, when a part of one of the best townships was newly sur veyed and the plats filed in the land office at Lakeview. The township ia also in one of the ar tesian well basins that the U. S. geological survey says will pro duce a strong flow of water if it is found that irrigation is neces sary to insure crops. There is a striking signifi cance, a wealth of the romantic atmosphere of the awakening West, and a vivid, elaborate pic turing of the wilderness respond ing to the genius of Western con structive civilization in the beau tiful book written by Isabelle Carpenter Kendall entitled "Across the Continent." It is the first book of the Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound Rail way, and is a luxuriously design ed and printed volume descrip tive of the wonderlands between the Mississippi and the Pacific Ian. .ViMtt v , ,v v , v ,, PROGRESS OF A PRODIGY. Upward Trend and Bottom Stop of a Brainy Youth. Xorbert rcmtlethwiilte was a wonder ful boy. When but eleven month old he could repeat the alphabet elear hroiiuh from eitln-r end of It ami at nix years old had memorized the Dee- liiniMim of Independence. At the un timely apo of fourteen he wan fitted for college la mstiheinath-i. philosophy, ancient find mKVni lansnugen and the scieiiem, and In h-ss than three years after filtering he completed the reeu lar four yearn' eourne uud received the degree of bachelor of arts at the riiw ace of seventeen. Thus this brainy youth proceded up the bill of learning until, when he was twenty-one years old, he was truly au appalling example. lie was es famil iar with the hue Aristotle, Plato. Ile- mostheues and all such an you and I are with William J. Bryan, and had lie chanced to iiun't In the highroad a centleinan who addressed him In ei ther of seven different languages and dialects he would have had a working notion as to whether the stranger opined It looked like rain or merely wished to pick a fight. But, although thus armed, equipped and overload!, he found when he went forth to baltle with the world that some one had stolen the ladder to success and that hia neck was too thin to permit him to hold a Job as a street ear conductor. Our learned hero was nothing daunted, however, but straightway mounted the lyeeum plat form and. displaying his matchless eruditeuess to jieople who had very lit tle idea what he was talking about, was for a time a notable success. Presently, however, untoward fate again assailed our hero. Moving pic ture showa and ten cent vaudeville sprung op like noxious weeus ana speedily put the Intellectual treat on the hummer. But Xorbert, again equal to the emergency, procured an appro priate costume, converted Ills lecture luto burlesque, and with his spindle shanked neck, overhanging brows and a squeaky chuckle he was a veritable scream as a silly boy monologist lie Is now diligently practicing a song and dance, and as soon as he fully masters a funny fall of his own invention and a new and exceedingly humorous way of splttiug, which he has already thought out, he expects to climb Into polite vaudeville on the big circuits, where he can doubtless soon dictate his own price. Because of the manner In which he overcame every obstacle In his path way we should feel warranted In giv ing three hearty cheers for Norbert Tostlethwalte. Tom P. Morgan In Puck. An Accomplished Linguist. "Did you lenrn any French while you were in Paris?"- asked Bildad, "meeting Slithers shortly after his re turn from Europe. "Oh, a little," said Slithers. "Xot so very much, though. I got so I could say cigarette In French." "Good," said Bildad. "What is ciga rette in Freneh?" "Cigarette," said Slithers. Harper's Weekly. Maintaining Discipline. "The manager discharged Jibbs." "What for?" "Jibbs said that the boss" son, the junior partner, was a fool and an ass. "Well, well:" "The manager didn't discharge Jibbs so much for that either as to maintain discipline. He said Jibbs bad no right to expose the secrets of the house." Browning's Magazine, Lesson In Etiquette. "I was ashamed of you at that dinner last night, you made so much noise drinking your tea." "Why, I was only sipping it. It was hot." "I should say you were gargling. Why didn't you pour it" out luto your saucer, the way I did?" Atchison Globe. Surplus of Alimony. "Tour honor, it Is a serious tax on my client having to pay three separate alimonies, more especially when one of his ex-wives Is at present receiving! alimony, from two other sources." Read the Journal. IL50 a year. Real Estate Active. John II. Htinson of the Oregon & Western Colonization Company re ports much activity in real estate. J lis company hag just plat ted an addition to the town of Sisters, the Davidson Addition, and last Monday while at Sisters, Mr. Stinson sold over a thousand dol lars worth of lota to local business men. The people right at home wanted these lots for building pur poses. One hundred and twenty acres of outside property was a! O sold. W. J. Knox of Corvallis has bought 240 acres above the tew8lt grade. Mr. Knox passed through l'rineville the other day with an auto truck loaded with household gooda. A thrifty class of people are find ing good homes on lands suited to their needs and purse, Mr. Stinson eavs. The Band Entertained A brass bind is as a rule expect ed to furnish entertainment but this order of things was reversed on last Thursday evening when Miss Dolly Hodges and Mrs. C. O. Pollard gave an informal reception at the home of the latter in honor of the l'rineville Military Band After a few instrumental num bers luncheon was served on the lawn. A novel feature of the affair was in the Selecton of partners. Each lady present was furnished a folder containing a miniature photograph of the member of the band with whom she was expected to dine. How the hostess secured the photos of the individual band men was for a time a mystery. Binds More Sheaves with Less Twine Plymouth Binder Twine is made right. It works smoothly, ties - properly, and the last of the ball feeds as freely as the first. No knots or breaks. Fifty per cent stronger than the strain o( tnj- machine actually requires. PLYMOUTH Binder Twine is used more than any other twine because it ia known to bo the best. Made by the oldest cord age establishment in the United States, wherequality and honesty are spun into every ball of twine. Farmers who insist on seeing the 'S'heat-sheaf tag on every ball of tivine save money and avoid harvest delays. For sale by J. E. Stewart & Co. in