IB, lumping Outfits We Have Three Different Kinds in Stock Fairbank-Morse - - International Harvester Co. - - Aermotor Have you seen the Aermotor Pumping Outfit work? Four Different sizes now on exhibition. $50 will place an outfit on your place with power enough to pump water for stcck, irrigate the garden, run the grindstone, washing machine, cream separator, churn and other things that usuall take time and hard work. Gasoline Engines $ $ $ in Dairying 3 We are the exclusive agents fyr the Simple--Safe--Very Durable The W. F. King Co Sharpies Tubular Cream Separators-.-Knounh Said- Farm Implements of all kinds LOCAL MENTION Miss Mae Knox returned Satur Jv from Iiit vaealion. Mr. Hubert K. (!ray left last Friday (or trip to Astoria ami lr. t Inrlc, wife and daughter Iff t Sunday for Crescent Inko for mi outing. Sheriff Italfour relumed the last of t lie week from an inspection of the went side. V. V, I'.rown of Kife 'paMed through I'rineville. Fridny on hie way to l'ortlaud. Minn Kva Clark of C'lifrnin, daughter of I r . Clark, arrived last week on a visit to Iiit father. I'ete Ifenkle, I'rineo (ia.eand Will Prose left Monday for Ml. Jefferson on a fishing and hunting trip. Mr. Led ford and Mr. J. N. Williamson will leave Saturday for a visit to The Dulles and Port land. Karl Wurtweiler and friend, Vm Ludltiin, came up from the metropolis laatweek,ln the Wur weikr car. Judge V. A. Booth, L. A. llooth, Robert Zeverly and II. 1. Still left Tuesday for diamond lake on a bunting and fishing trip. Mm. Hugh Lister returned lo l'aulina the last ol the week. .She wan accompanied by Mrs. Lininger who will visit at the Lister home for a snort time. Mrs. L. Dillon and son, Orval, left today for California on a visit to relatives. Mrs. Dillon will visit her brothers and son at Visulia and Porterville. Harney Milliorn and Curtis & Kvans have the painters and pnpor hangers at work fixing up their places of business. A little paint makes a vast difference in the appearance of things. Uollin lluoven, a wholesalo and retail groceryman from San Fran cisco, bought two ranches iu Crook county this week and will come here to live when he can dispose of his interests in California. The old stage office in the Wiley building is being fitted up for Zeverly & Dailing's barber shop, now located in the Hotel Oregon. The new hotel needs the room and will fit it up for a ladies' parlor. Sheriff Balfour was instructed bv District Attorney Wilson to ar rest a woman at South Junction for running a "blind pig." The sheriff got busy but found that South Junction was not in his bailiwick. It was just over the Wasco county line. l'aul Mertsching roturned from Portland yesterday whore he bought a well-drilling outfit. Mr, lertschlng , and family have bought over a thousand acres of land in the Dry creek country. He is now building a $1500 home and will move his family there from Oregon City when it is completed. a new Heo LOCAL MENTION Horn August 13, to the wife of Hurt Hurch, a girl. liorn August !), to the wife of (i rover K.wing, a girl. Margaret lies people will be here during the fair in October. J. J. Smith left for Portland on a business trip Monday. Joe Combs and wife are down from l'aulina. Kdgur Stewart and family will leave Saturday for a Vacation. M. II. Klliott and family left Tuesday for a trip to Crater Lake. Mrs. Kstes left for Portland to d iy to buy her fall stock of milli nery. Robert Cram and wife of Trout creek are visiting at the home of ! J. W. Horrigan. Rev. HusBins left yesterday Leo Lafollette has runabout. Dr. Spaubling left for Portland last Friday. Mrs. Carl Wlndom was up from Culver the. first of the week. Hiram tlihson came up from The Dulles tint first of the week. Mrs. Mildred Lyons of Spring field is visiting her sister, Mrs. R. (i. Smith. Judge I tell and wife and Miss Fayne left this morning for their home in The Dalles. Mr. and Mrs, John Wigle and Carey Foster and family returned the first of the week from Metolius. Witford llelknap and Lester Cobrs got back last night from a two weeks' outing at Belknap Springs. Messrs. Coffoid, Dickinson and Hunt, cattle buyers, made a trip u.j Crooked river Monday looking for beef cattle. Mrs. Cyrus joined ( morning for Spokane to attend li e the party in the capacity of ofliuial M, R. conference, photographer, marriagH license was issued Miss Irene Harnes of Pnneville' Mondav to William II. IUnnells John Morgan is again at work at the Independent central, after a month's vacation. Word from the Stearns ranch at La Pine to the Journal says that crop in that section are much better than usual. Mr. Stearns will put up liOO tons of meadow hay this year. is the guest of her brothers, tiaSl and Pryor Barnes, of this place. Miss 1 lames expects to visit for a couple of weeks. Harney Co. News. and Anna Josephine Deney. K. liorgland, an attorney of Madras, was a Priueville visitor this week. There will be no nreachine at T. II. Quinn, R. L. Brewster and tha Union church Sunday, as tho Addie Foster have returned from J pastor goes toNewsom creek to their fishing and hunting trip onjpreacDi the Metolius. They don't eayi . ,..,, . :i I v - i l ' n much about the bunting but re at the Urosius Bar, is spending . e i. : I porv u.m8 BUUU. ! a few days hunting and fishing J. II. Windom and family hae ubout Odell lake returned from ttietr trip toll a.- R V. Breese, George Noble, Willamette valley and Newport. Je(Mse y4ncev and A1bert Noble re- They report an enjoyable time.. turned yeglerday from a hunting trip in the Big and Little Summit country. Nothing doing. Walt Snoderly and family were down Crooked river Tuesday, taking in the sights at the Ore gon Trunk steel bridge at Trail Crossing, which is fast nearing completion. Wesley McCollura, charged with selling liquor without a li cense, waived examination late Saturday night and held to the grand jury in $250 bonds, which were promptly furnished: Mc- Collum is about 70 years of age. Married At the residence of Chas. O. Christian! down Crook ed river Monday, William D. Rannells and Anna Josephine Doney, Rev. C, P. Bailey officia ting. After tho ceremony an el egant luncheon was served by Mrs. Christian!, which was ap preciated by all present. The happy couple will make their home in Crook county. The state forester has appoint ed twenty supervising gardens w ho are under state pay and de vote their entire time to sup pression or fires and enforce ment of fire laws. The counties in which these men are 'located are Benton, . Clatsop, Clackamas, Columbia, Coos, Crook, Douglas, Jackson, Klamath, Lake, Lincoln Linn, Marion, Multnomah, Polk, Tillamook, Union. Wallowa, Wes tern Grant and Wheeler, Eastern Grant and Malheur, Washington, Yamhill, Baker and Harney. The. roads over the mountains a in fairly good shape. Badly cut up in some places but otherwise good. A. C. Barber, who lives 12 miles east of Bend, was a business visi tor to Prineville last Friday. Mr. Barber, who has lived in Crook county since last fall, is - well pleased with the country. He has lived in . different parts of the coast from British Columbia to California and likes it here as well as any place; much better than Uritish Columbia. J. H. Dulore returned the first of the week from a three weeks' trip through Grant "and Harney counties. He was looking for land but could find nothing that suited him hotter than could be found at home. Ho found bountiful bar vests everywhere on his trip. He never saw the country look better and he has lived in Crook county 35 years. Mr. Delore bought the old Cartwright place 20 miles up Crooked river. Copios of the fire law and oth er fire literature are being freely distributed in the state by the government, state and private interests seoking to reduce pos sibility of forest fire damage. This, together with a better pub lic sentimont in favor of sup pression of fires, should result in their being far less frequent and damaging this summer than dur ing previous years. Wedding Bells. Miss Frieda Lippman. eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Lippman, and Theodore J. Min ger were the principals in a very pretty wedding at the home "f the bride's parents, this city, Tuesday evening, Hev. C. P. Bailey officiating. After the ceremony an elabor ate luncheon was served to the bridul party and the few invited guests present, which was done ample justice to. and after the feusiing the tin-can brigade ap peared upon the scene and as saulted the night with a rousing. double-barrelled charivari, the participants in which the bride groom was compelled to bribe heavily to discontinue the per formance. Mr. and Mrs. Minger went to housekeeping at once in their new residence, amid the best wishes and congratulations of their numerous friends in this city. Poland-China Hogs I have a choice lot o pure-blood pigs of both sexes for sale now at reasonable pi ices, some olil enough for service now. 7-27 C. M. Kleins, Prineville, Ore. Horses for Sale. On the old' C. Sum Smith ranch. near 1'rinevllle. U'5 bond of mares and iteldliiKH, lnrtre enough for work horses, will be sold lu any number at reasonable prices, tor further Information addresg ti. II. Kusmeu., l'rluevllle, Oregon. 12-ll-tt Furnished Rooms Furnished rooms for rent. Apply to Mrs. Ellen Uullilord, first house next Kolit. Moore's blacksmith shop. '7-27-lmp it, s Binds More Sheaves with Less Twine Plymouth Binder Twine Is made right. It work! smootniy, tics properly, and the last of the ball feeds as freely as the first. No knots or breaks. Fifty per cent stronger than tho strain of any . machine actually requires. a) PlYMOUTH Binder Twine is used more than any other twine because it is known to be the best Made by the oldest cord age establishment in the United States, wherequahty and honesty are spun into every ball of twine. Farmers who insist on seeing the wheat-sheaf tag on every ball of twine save money and avoid harvest delays. 11 For sale by Don't Judge a Roofing By Its Looks On the surface most ready roofings look the same, but the weather rinds the hidden weakness. You can't tell by looks which roofing will last twenty years and wilich will go to pieces in a single summer. trace stun eta. u. . pat. Of r. Has stood for T-.early twenty years as the standard of all ready roofings. The first buildings ever roofed with Ruberoid nearly twenty years ago are still water-proof and weather-tight. These buildings are the oldest roofed with any ready roofing. Get This Free Book It tells the advantages and disadvantages of tin, tar, shingle, iron and ready roofings fairly, frankly, impartially. Learn about aH roofs before deciding on any. SHIPP & PERRY . Prinville, Oregon Crook County Journal County Official Paper $1.50 a Year Subscribe Now LTTDVCBEiR, Shingles, Mouldings, Windows, Doors, Glasses, Etc. Etc., Etc. 1 SHIPP to. PPRRV 6 I PRINEVILLE. OREGON il