Visit the Fair and See what Crook County Can Grow. Good Racing Program. Fast Baseball. Today Redmond Day Grook County Journal COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER, $1.50 YEAR PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCT. 12, 191 1. EXZXL'ISSSEZS I'W VOL. XV-NO. 46 ADDRESS MADE BY x JAMES J. HILL CIRCUIT COURT CONVENES MONDAY Long Criminal and Civil Docket. Loss -' r" Delivered at Prineville October 1st. GREATLY PLEASED WITH CITY Thinkt It Hat Great Future. He Wanted to See Prineville. IjkIIc'x uihI iiut Iftiicri 1 hud al ways heard tlutt Central Oregon wit dry country; (lint It whliiin ruined there, lint I wnn( to tell you there Vint a lot i( ruin Is'tween here ninl Opnl Clly, over where we lef( the (mill. Now, your rluilrtiiiin turni'il mo Ioiihi wlili very little uf nil liitroilurtluii, hut I want to Htiy (lint I always (-.! pertiftly nt homo when t n tn on the fmiiilcr. lhnve; (lit- Kn-ntiKt regard for tli M-tiIt : wlio liikvn lived ninl pioneered ninl , Ihtii mi tlin tr.iin li-r. Invnuw ( tinvt j lived. In the Went (or some llliy llve ycnrn, ninl I Iiiivh made ninny ( u long hard Joiirni'y In order to gel ' oiiifwhenj where (hern wiih n roiul, j mull knew tlmt a froutrer neuter's abode was always tioHiltiililti Willi tlit latch ntrlug always out. I wiih always glad to get there ami I never wits illHiiiolut'il. We roughed It n j llttli', ninl some ol you coming In ! here tti imt have roughed It nt mi early tiny. It took ttoiiii' courage. How were you going to dispone o( what you rnlm-il ninl luit you coulil Hot eat'.' Voti woiilil have to (it'll It to mini" tinliiml tlmt woiilil curry It to innrkt't mi It ow n tivl. mpr.,i Wild llw S.U. 1 am greatly liiiprecd with whnt I have seen tnilny thi' mill nnd the quality of tlin mill. II you cnuuot rnlM dm biggest crop 1 ever uw with ytmr Roll which will grow big black Hugvlirunh I saw mum' of It whlt'h wuh quite illllli'tilt In the even, lug to tt'll It from what you cnll thf Jniilirr. .Soini of tho liruHli wan al most eight, tt'ti mid twi'lvc lift high. 1 think 1 mi? not stretching It whi-ii I get II i to It'll lift. I, ninl Unit will ; grow almost anything tlmt you i-iin 1 plant In It, If you know how to cnnx : thi' liunl lo do Hm iluty. I Von linvn got a good IiiIhtII itiici-, anil whfii thi country wnn opened up I presume n great imiiiy years j ago not all, hut some came out an J inlNHloniirlt'H; mime t'liiuti out hi'rt' on i tlirlr own account ami others dinning gold. Tht-rt' Ik Homcthlng tlmt Is Vrry attractive to the human iiilml In looking for thu prtvioiis int'tulN, Imt win) n you llinl thu precious mt'tnlH uinl come to dig tlii'in out of the Kroiiml , what In It'll? All mineral Im a lluullty ntt it you have got the ore where you tan see It or take It nut of the mini'. Hut, you have here In your Noll a mine tlmt will renew It null every year. Now, If wo take the production of koi In the world It In about M!in,ono,iXH). The ngrl cultural production of the I'lilled Stilton for the hint two ycurH line averaged about ulnu lillllou dollars. The amount In ho large that It Ih illlllcult f ir the human iiilml to com. prebend It. Aliout nine litlllon do. lurs taken out of the ground lM 'u wlieultli created out of the vleineutal things uud such hh can bo repro duced every year, and more, fur more, than uluti billion dollars can be realized If our people are true to theiiiHelvi'M and If they only make up their iiiIiiiIm to do their work hh well iih other people have done It In other countries, Now Franco Ih tho money country of the world, and France has not any big gold mine, coal mine or any other mine, but her HcIicd come from the Having of the miuiiII French farmer and IiIh wife. Another re markably rich country in Europe Ih Denmark. Denmark Iiiih poor land; you would not live on It. Vet Den mark has fifty-two agricultural col leges and high Hclioow, The aver age slue of their faruiH Ih forty-three acres. That would not do In Ore gon, but time will come when you won't want to cultivate ho many uctch of litnd as now. 1 urn not going to find fault with anybody who has acquired and owns luud on the frontier or In Central J ,Ai t.. j Vl f HhrtuiUyT rirti . a N 4. t T1 t K v 7 -.it.'.-' t.. News Snapshots Of the Week Tripoli, war having liet-n dei-lnn-d by Italy. Atturney (Jenernl Wlckemliam declared that (he governmen( la not entering Into promlncuoua attacka upon lant irHirnlliina nnl that the ilepitrtuiwil of Jtmllro will n( Injure any ItitertHita unnnitmnrlly. Hcporta (hat the government would aeek to diitsolve the icvl cotnliliiniliin Ittl lo a etiiuitliiiiil brar mhl In New York, w hich J. l'lerpont Mitkhd foiiKht. Waldenmr Kokovtviff became the premier of IiusitiA. Oregon, lHi'iiiim If any body enme here ten, lldet'ii, or twenty yenm ago and got a good body of laud and got rich out of It, I want to miy that nuvbody (he old tteltler who hat lived here for thine yenm Ih en tilled to everything he hint got, and he Iiiih not been overpaid. Your hind Iiiih been hen ttlnee Adam and I'.ve were In the garden of Ktlen, and the cliaugeH I Imt have litt'il luade have I hi 'ii uiiitle by men and wtimeii. Ctnt f l.tt for ThU C.Mlrr. You have n future for thlit country, and It Ih better ttlll I linve hud fairly good aecouiiU of It but It looked better to me HiIh afternoon or evening than I expet ted. It wtut not nil eiiHy Job to build from the mouth of the river iih fur iih we have got, ninl we hope now It will enable people to come In mid look the ground over and Mettle umoiig you. It me give you a little advice. What you want here I more people; what you want Ih people to come In here and occupy Unite ferllW ore. Now tune of them who would like to come have not twenty or thirty ilulliim mi acre to buy land with and to Htnrt their Iiiiiuch with. Doe'l Mirk Tnr Ludi Too H!k until you have got nt leant a circle near euoiigh ho that the neighbor tit any rale can hear (he other M Iow'h dog bark on a Htlll night. You want people to ncatter through the country, anil when you get them your landH will become valuable enough. And you cannot mine the value of your land paid for In Jack knlvt'H. If any nl them! people come In uee them well; take mich care of tliein iih you would like iiclghborH to take of you; don't have them go back ninl give you a bad name mid May, "Oh, while the land Ih all right. If It rained, the people ure too I'ltUti." We are all hcIHhIi; but you will do lictter for your country, you will tlo better fur thin Rectlon of the Htatc, you will tlo better for your hi'Ivi'h, If you give them a fair chance. Alwayn In making a trade, remem ber that the other fellow ought to make Hiiuiethliig, and don't take It nil -give him a chance to have a little margin, bccaUHe he Ih going to be hen- with you. or ought to be here with you iih a neighbor. A good neighbor Ih always a pleiiHiint thing and u bad neighbor Ih never a pleiiHtiut thing, . I cannot help, iih I turn my head around and nee UiIh grain and the country that will grow thin kind of Htutf without apllcliig the Htraw Ih not to be turned down. 1 don't know how much of a grain country you are go ing to make of It. Don't go wild on fruit. Fruit Ih good, and mine all you want and ralne all that you can ralBe In iih good form uh they ralHO It down at The DiuIch and over In the Willamette; but If condltioiiH do not play even with It, don't cIhihu It too hard. Have enough for yourself, but devote your time to the crop that will bring you the nuiHt money. R.it. Alf.lf. If you can get this Hort of stuff to grow pointing to alfalfa and I am willing to admit that I think It grew here and that yon did not bor row It. Now, look at that point ing at alfalfa U you could grow that It will beat till the npplea that you mine on these plateaus. If I had to have one crop on a farm and had to be confined to one crop I would take alfalfa. Clover Is good. Alfalfa will take the place of L Ar IT !'!. lAU '! yvK ki k: sham I i ;: i The Krt'iieh wnnthlp I.IU'rle, whlrb vlitltwl (lilu country at the time of the Hntliion Ktiltoii celebration, blew up off Toulon, Knmee, nd mnmiit .'loo hveg wore hrnt The Unit nfrtnl p"tnl ervlce In the Cnltetl Htatea wai tried on Long Island. Pot nianlPr'Ufiit'rnl llltt-lmi-k 111 a hlplnue driven by Captain Heck, D. 8. A., carrtfd bag of poatcarda from the Naasao aviation field (o the MlutKila poKtolIli'e. Cbevkct I'anha, war mlnlnter. maaned Tnrkey'a troopa to meet the Italian Invading forcea In more klmla of other cropn than any other plant that Ih grown on the furiiiH of thin country. Now you ihii make good beef mid good pork with alfalfa. All you want U Home grain to harden (hem out lit the IIiiIhIi. There are four or live weeks you want a little grain to top ofl with. It HtfiiiH to me that If you can rulne HiIh alfalfa (pointing to a bundle) mid I have uo doubt you rained It It Ih Herloimly worth every effort that you can make to grow It. That corn looks comfortable but iih between corn mid alfalfa, I would take alfalfa any time against the corn that grows In the Miami bot tom or In the Mlxsourl button, or the WiiIiiihIi, of any of the bent corn countries that we have; and I am mini that In the long run the alfalfa will lieal It. Solfyoij cannot raise corn iih a sun' thing, don't get tired, don't give It up. You can In a country that will turn out what Is here tonight cnll for a place on the front neat among the agricultural states, and Oregon will Uud lis place lu the front Heat. You can make It so. BmfiU Dairying. One - of the inont Important branches of agriculture Ih largciy overlooked. I watched It grow Irwin north of Lake Ontario, or, you may Hiiy, from the etiHtern end of Lake Ontario wentward until anally It has reached the I'lU'lllc Count. I al lude to dairying. Dairying Is of more conncipience to successful funn ing than most people for one mo ment coiinlder. It help every crop. It helps keep up the fertility of the mill, anil, of ltHclt, It Ih an excellent crop. .The hall Htorm does not kill It entirely; drought and dry seasons do not kill It entirely, and a good dairy cow will raise nt least (our pigs, and she ought to raise six If she Is well looked after. Hop ProliUblt. Well, now, a pig properly looked after, seven or eight months old Is worth fourteen or fifteen dollars. Ami I dou't know but It is about as easy as getting money from home to raise a pig and get tlfU'en dollars for him wheu he is eight mouths old Which Is the easier thing, to raise mich a pig as that or to plow and harrow, seed, disc and harvest and market an acre of grain? fifteen dollars au acre Is not so bad lots of people get less. Cultivate Ih Soil. Now, I have talked to you a little about a subject that Is always more or less In my mind, and that Is the cultivation of the soil, because no nation, no people and no com munity no large community uo state, has ever continued for a long period of time unless It gave the first place to tho cultivation of the soil. With the opportunities you have to get people here, aud that is what you want, they cau come In now and not have to go 125 to 150 miles to get to the courthouse or to the market. We hope that within the next couple of summers tho country will realize, the country will bo made to know what we know tonight, be cause they will see what we see to nlglit, .they will see what you raise. It they" feunnot come 3500 miles or 3,000 or 250Q nilk'8 to Central Oregon to see what you have got, we will have to take Ceufral Oregen or part of It to where they live so that they cau see It; aud that Is what we pro pose to do. Now, In doing that, we will help jTTi r I-1 1 &Z amo cavt pech rAP't y-i mail otirselve; we will advance our own Interest. We would Im-sorry to have spent the money we have to come In here nnd build a good road up that gorge unless we believed In the future growth of this part of your state. Rcmemlier If there was no body but Adam and F.veln the Harden of Kden, a railroad would not be worth a cent. You have got to have people, you have got to have a good niuuy of them; you have got to have It so that they can work, they have got to be prosperous, be muse If they are not, anil If they cannot carry on the work they have in hand nnd make more that a bare living, they won't stay; they will go iiwnv. That Is an advantage they have. The railroad hns not got that advantage. The railroad when It comes here once, It Ih In partner ship with the laud upon which we live nud walk. It must be poor with It, and It will ouly pronr when the land prospers, or the owner of the land prospers. You ca Hhll yotr laud and. move awity, (f I owned the railroad I might sell It but I have a great many partners, about 1S,000 and about 8,000 of them are women and children, aud I have to take care of their Interest. Now with their eminent I could Bell the railroad, but I could not take It away. It Is here, It has got to re main, and It has got to have Its prosperity or Its poverty with the growth of this couutry, and that Is the reason why we are so anxious that you should grow. In order that you may make greater efforts. We know that If vour efforts fall, that we full, and every dollar that we get you have got to get It first, that Is the reason that we take so deep an Interest In your success. We are glad now and at all times, and we always have lieen It has been our policy to try and hold up the hands of the mau who is cultl vatlug the land. WutcJ la Set PriaevUle. Now, I take It that a great many of you livelu Prineville. I kuew about Prineville five or six years ago, and I had a curiosity to see It because a party told me it was situated In a lovely part of Central Oregon, and that really while a gretit deal of Ccutral Oregon might lie classed as desert laud, Prineville was an ex ception. Now I have not seen any desert land except an occasional bunch of It that stuck through. Some of the land looked to me I am not quite used to this volcanic ash yet, but I hope to be, some of It looked to me very fertile and I have not seen anything to discourage that view. I hope tlmt we will have nn oppor tunity to exteud our lines farther than where the end Is now. It won't be nearly as hard to come over this plain as It was to get onto It, and it will not take as much money. I am, on the whole, glad that 1 did not start to come up the river before tho road was built, be cause I spent a good deal of money In building roads on the prairie and even across the mountains, but I tlou't quite remember of any 115 or 120 miles that has started to go so many places and suddenly changed Its mind aud took another direction. It took another direction. It Is crooked, I think that ought to be Crooked river. At the same time we have got a pretty good road there and It cost a good deal of money, aud for that reason we are inter ested in getting some of It back, We are glad at all times that we are In position to help share your burden, but don't put all your burden on us, don't feel that after we come here aud help yon build the country up don't leel as If we were rigs; fruit on the branch or roast turkey ready to lie carved up. Try to treat us an you would like to he treated, aud we will treat you as we want you to treat us; treat us lulrly and we will treat you fairly. Home of you and your forebearers who brought you here, know what it whs to live on the frontier. I have had a little experience myself. I lived In Minnesota in 1VI2 when 15 to 1(1 hundred people were killed by the Sioux and I say I go back with a great deal of sympathy and a warm pluce In my heart for the peo- tile who live on the frontier, but when you are almost within sound ! of the whistle of the tralu, you are not on the frontier as you were. I might say I hope the time won't be too far away when we can get that whistle an It will sound louder In i your ear, when .you will hear the j whistle and not its echo. i I I a. . ! .. t 1 1 i iioiie m m.-e fuu aguiu ouu uopv to see you frequently, and If I am not able to see you as often as I would line to I aip going to send my son, I am not lu, una l uon t kuow that you are In the position of an old colored man that had been taught something of Christianity, but he had not entirely gotten over vlsitiug the smokehouses. On one oeeunion he was caught with a ham. He did not know how to get out of It, but he had been taught If he wanted any thing lie was to ask the Lord for It and to pray, so he made a break for the woods and got down and snld, "O Lord, you'se old servant Is In powerful trouble, come down Lord and help me, come yourself, don't send your son, it's no boy's Job." Prineville People in Auto Accident. (ioing at the rate of about 30 miles au hour, an automobile in which were five people smashed into a juniper tree yesterday af ternoon near Cline Falls and was wrecked. The accident was caused by the steering gear breaking. S. O. Johnson, a wealthy timberman of San Fran cisco, was the only person hurt, the escape of the others being remarkable. When the tree was struck the auto turned over. Mr. Johnson was in the middle seat of the touring car and having nothing to hold to was thrown out and the car fell on him. His right ankle was badly bruised but no bones were broken. The others in the car were Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Ryan of Bend, Miss Fay Bald win of Prineville and the driver, Jack Dana. Fortune favored them and they got off with noth ing more than a severe jolting. Mr. Johnson said last night that the car was badly damaged, one wheel and the front part be ing demolished. The Wenandy Livery Co. was telephoned to send a car for the party and Mr. Darby went down. Mr. Johnson arrived in Bend Sunday with a party of friends and was making a pleasure trip when the accident occurred. Bend Bulletin. THREE MURDER CASES COME UP An Unusually Long Civil Docket. The Longest for Many Year. Circuit court convenes Monday, October 16tb, in Prineville. There are a large number of criminal cases for the grand jury to look in to and an unusually long civil docket to be thrashed out at thi term. Clarence Robieon, who has been ' in jail here aince last May, charged with killing Lou McCallister at Howard, will be among the first to come op. Then there is J. L. lliley, charg ed with killing Louie Long June 1st, near Redmond. Deputy Sheriff C. YV. William?, who shot end killed Thomas Miller, who was trying to make a get-away while being brought to l'rineville, will be tried at this terra. James Moore of Redmond, charg ed with receiving stolen goods, will have a hearing before the grand jury. Joe Nell of Opal City, who got into fight wto a fellow laborer on the railroad and killed him, will be investigated. ('has. I'errin, of Paulina and Wesley McCallum of AehwoodV charged with selling liquor witb- out a county license will come be- . . , . tore tne grand jury. E. W. Atwater of Sisters, charged with larceny from a dwelling, is to be tried. D. II. Latham, charged with negligently allowing a fire to escape ' from a burning yellow jackets nest, , will have a chance to explain to- . the grand jury how it happened-. Four bawdy house cases fromrx Bend are slated for the grand jury. William Linster of Bend was bound over to the grand jury, charged with wanton cruelty to animals. William McXary, who lives near Sisters, is charged with assault . with intent to kill. He was placed i under peace bonds. The grand jury will look into his case. District Deputy Prosecutor Wintac says that some of the cases will not be taken up by the grand jury. Notably the bawdy house cases at Bend. It has been the policy of District Attorney Wilson to make, incorporated towns take care of their own troubles and not put the county to the expense of trying municipality cases-. TRIAL CALENDAR T. II. Brennan vs John Devine, J. L. Smith, and F. M. Smith. W. A. Bell, attorney for plaintiff; M. R. Elliott, attorney for defendant. F. A. Powell and R. A. Powell vs Lethie A. Miller. Geo W. Barnes, attorney for plaintiff; M. E. Brink, attorney for defendant. Desehutea Irrigation and Power Company, vs William B. Wilson and State Land Board. Jesse Stearns and John H. Hall, attorney for plaintiff; Kollock and Zolhinger attorneys for defendant. Willia'm C. Buckner vs Hawley N. North and G. B. Darvivis, r. A. Bell, attorney for plaintiff; Gammans and Malarkey, attorney for defendant. Deschutes Railroad Company vs Anton Birken field and Julia Birk- Continued on page 7.