Crook County journal. (Prineville, Or.) 189?-1921, November 23, 1911, Image 8

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    HANDLING SHEEP
FOR BEST PROFITS,
Tbe first requisite to profitable sheep
Titslog Is food stock, Poor stock to
sheep ts s sure money loser and sonrc
of disgust and innoyaoos, write M.
H. Munson of Massachusetts la tbe
New England Uomestead.
Tbe secoud polut 10 be Doted Is tb
proper enrlroniueat. both summer aDd
whiter, for the Bock. Sheep should
hire so upland pasture during sum
mer, easy access to pure water and
salt and atHimlant shade, either nat
ural or artificial. If possible to do so
It will be found advantageous to
change sht'ep occasionally from one
pasture to another, ilowerer. if they
are allowed a rather large range It U
hot absolutely essential.
Taking up tbe third point, proper
feed and care. I would say that tbe
winter quarters need not be expensive,
but should be light and so arranged
with windows and doors that plenty
of fresh air can be admitted at will
If lambs come In September and Oc
tober, when or tall feed on the mow-
1 - r.
HORSK NOTES.
Growing colts need plenty of
exercise.
Never hurry a team when
heavily loaded.
It Is a serious loos to let a colt
run down at weaning time.
Protection from stormy and In
clement weather will make feed
go further.
When you again train young
horse do It with mingled Crm
ness and goodness.
Keeping the skin of the horse
clean enables It to sweat freely,
and this Is essential to health.
K little patience tu teaching the
horse to be gentle and obedient
may add many dollars to hla
value.
DAIRY SHORTHORNS.
An
Oxford sheep are popular tn parts
ot the stit; leas known in New
Eostand. but a breed worth care
ful consideration aarwbere. Tbe
ram here pictured was champion
Oxford at the Iowa state (air. Hs
Is owned br George McKerrow ot
Wisconsin. Tbe Oxford Is a large
and handsome sheep, very aiert
and aotlTe ea Its feet for Its also.
Taken as a whole, It to t moat
prolific bread. An Oxford sire Is
as good as can be found for cross
breeding and a fine mutton type.
The ewes are very hardy, very
prolific are fine mothers and sel
dom ever hare any trouble in lamb
ing season. They are very quiet
and gentle wtrh their lambs, nave
an Immense amount of milk, and
tbe ewes never refuse to own their
lambs. Tbe rams at two years of
age often weigh SJO pounds.
ing. and get nicety started before com
ing to barn, the sheep fold may be
rather loosely boarded with no detri
ment to ewes or lambs.
If, however, ewes do not lamb till
November, December and January we
must have tbe fold tightly boarded and
papered so as to be able If necessary
on cold days or nights to keep tbe tem
perature from going below freezing.
By so doing we save very largely In the
number of lambs raised.
Pure water and salt should be kept
by tbe ewes and lambs in winter as
well as in summer. If sheep and
lambs are properly fed and watered
and their feet kept dry we have gone
a long way In properly caring for
them. There Is, however, a true need
for a thorough dipping of every sheep
each spring and fall to prevent or de
stroy ticka
For grain rations I use two parts
cracked corn, one oats, one middlings
and one of bran for ewes. Begin a
couple of days after lambing with one
balf pint once a day per sheep and
gradually Increase to one and one-quarter
quarts each, and. in case sheep
are extra large, even to two quarts a
day. Lambs get grain (one part crack
ed corn, two parts oil meal or oil cake)
In trougbs m small pens, where they
go at will through small openings.
This Is put In fresh each morning and
night and all grain left from previous
feed swept out before any fresb Is put
In trough. Lambs also have access to
clover rowen In their own pens. Ewes
get rowen from time they come to barn
If we have it for them; if not, then the
very best sweet, fine mixed bay, early
cut or else clover hay.
Appreciation of This Much Dis
cussed Breed.
In a communication to the Hroeder's
Gnzette extolling the virtues of the
dairy Shorthorn H. W. Avery says:
I am a farmer In central New York
and make cattle the main Issue. Milk
from the herd brings money every day
in the year, and every week or so the
butcher hands me a nice check for a
beet animal. I am entirely satlsUed
with the returns from the herd. It
brought me over $8,000 last year, more
than half of which was net profit. 1
Imagine they would be called dual pur
pose cows, the kind of cows that will
not down, notwithstanding the Insist
ent didactic statements of the self
styled "special purpose" men to the
contrary. Ninety-nine per cent of cows
are kept because their owners make
money out of them or hope to. A cow
that brings her owner a profit Is really
a special purpose cow kept especially
for that purpose, whether It be from
beef alone, from milk alone or from
milk and beef combined.
Six years ago I decided that the
dairy Shorthorn was the beat money
maker tor me tn the cow Une. and tbe
results have not disappointed me.
Last winter I visited Kngland to look
over tbe dairy Shorthorns. It was
not bard to find many apiendld cows of
the type that will give lota ot milk
and make good beef when required.
The English records for a day's pro
duction are la excess ot ours, but the
The dairy Bhorthorn cow Amy
V here Illustrated, owned by Sam
uel Sanday, Cheshire, Enalasd, la
a good example of this type of cat
tle. She gave over sixty pounds of
milk In a day at the London dairy
show last October. Amy V. Is a
handsome cow with dairy confor
mation, a capacious, well placed
udder and a frame that carries lota
of meat.
yearly production is not so great, ow
ing to tbe desire of the English breed
er to have bis cow go dry and produce
a calf every year. Darlington Cran
foni V. of Lord Rothschild's herd has
given In ten years a total of 1U1.74C
pounds of D.llk, or an average of 10,
174. U pounds per annum, and she pro
duced eleven calves, ouce twins. It
was Interesting to note that the milk
as produced by this herd and weighed
for each cow made a total of 504.SSO
pounds for 1910. and the weight of the
same milk sold was D(XJ,715 pounds, or
a shortage of less than fifteen pounds
per cow for tbe year.
Care of the Stallion.
Do not put tbe stallion in a foul,
dark stall. All horses are fond of hu
man companionship, and especially the
stallion. Tbe stall should be so ar
ranged that he can see people. Soli
tary confinement is not good for his
disposition. One essential thing is
plenty of exercise, if the stallion Is
not used on the road or in tbe harness
In farm work be should bave a large
paddock with g strong fence to run
In. Tbe horse Is mode for muscular
effort, and it is cruelty to deprive him
of It. Screen the stables with wire
netting to keep the flies out Anything
that adds to the comfort of the horses
is money saved.-Furm Journal.
Paralysis From Overfeeding.
Paralysis In swine most often fol
lows overfeeding of rirh nitrogenous
foods to animals that are closely con
fined. Pigs do best when allowed a
considerable range and not fed too
highly. As this affection, says the
Tanners' Digest. Involves the spinal
cord. It is not only liable to prove fa
tal, but is not, as a rule, satisfactorily
treated. First remove the cause. Cut
down the feed and allow plenty ol
range, and If not fed too liberally they
will forage about and get exercise.
Young pigs only partially paralyzed
will often come right treated as abjva
advised.
Experiments With Horses.
During the years 1900-10 experi
ments were conducted on four Danish
farms for the purpose of determining
the relative value of oats and Indian
corn, of oats nnd mangels or ruta
bagas and of whole and cut straw In
feeding work horses of tbe Jutland
breed. The main experiment period
lusted, as a rule, from two to three
months.
By substituting corn for oats two
pounds of corn was found equal to
two pounds of oats In the grain ra
tion, and some straw was saved by
muking this change. When about
four pounds of oats was replaced by
roots in a ration of from twenty to
twenty-four pounds of oats two
pounds of dry matter In tbe roots
proved equal to two pounds of dry
matter in the oats. Such a change In
the ration did not apparently produce
any Injurious effects on the health or
working capacity of the borses.
No Profit In Scrubs.
Do not try to make money with a
cow that does not pay for her feed:
it Is a very uphill Job. !f you have
three such cows sell them nnd put the
rioney Into one good one nnd you will
e surprised at the result, which will
be some profit and much less work.
Head your farm papers and try to pet
out of the rut of milking old Rrindle
just because your father used her and
her mother, but cross her with a good
dairy bred bull and keep at It If you
cannot afford to kill her and buy a
better one. Rural New Yorker.
Ideal Milk Storage.
Tbe Ideal place to store milk and
tream Is In a little tank between the
pump and tbe stock tank. All the
water that goes to the cattle must
flow through here, and naturally tbe
milk is kept cool.
The Clark Hair Dressing Parlor
Are located one block west from the
Commercial Club Hall. Puffs, switchm,
wigs, toupees, hair jewelry, etc, ordered1
on approval direct (runt the manu
facturers. Send in your hair combings
and have them made up as you want
them.
Ilainlrrssing 2.V, hair ilressed and
curled 50c, (ace mamsge 60c. scalp mas
sage 50c, shaniHK AOc, hair tinge S.V,
almond meal park AOc, t-lay pack otk
bleaching and dyeing 1 1. 00 up. mani
curing '.'.V to 50c, tl treatments Ml.
Start Right
To raise nearly all pullet,, mate
your pullet with a rooster older
than them. Buy an
Ancona Cockeral
Right now and a selling ol hiuh class
eggs from me next spring and when
ready (or mating you will have started
right Our stock is the lanious
Bred-to-lay-in-the-winter
Strain ol Conadale Anconas.
Ancona cockerels Irom $1.50 up.
Also a lew good mongrel hens and
pullets at a bargain.
J. S. FOX,
"Braeside" Prineville, Oregon
Pioneer Phone, Ak for "Braetide"
Horse for Sale, ,
On the olit C. Khiu Smith ranch,
near I'rlnevllle. 1.'5 hend ot mure
and Ki'ldtngs, liirgi- enough for work
horwee, will ! aold luniiy nmnlxT
at rvHHotmlile rlrva. For tort her
Information mldreea (I. II. ItOHNKt.i.,
I'rlnevllle, Otvgoii. M-Hl tl
5
For Sale!
A New Five Room Dwell
ing. Call on
A. H. Lippman & Co
The Brosius Bar
Finest Brand of Wine,
Liquor and Cigar.
LACER BEER ON DRAUGHT
F. E. BROSIUS, Proprietor
Sheriff a Sale
Millinery
Prices on Fall Hats greatly
reduced.
Mrs. Estes
Millinery Parlors.
PRINEVILLE, - - OREGON.
Notice of Adauustrator'i Sale of LacJ.
Notice is hereby given, by the miilT"!m-',
the adiiiiniMtraior of the estatt'of John 11.
Oufttaiaon, deccrutetl, ttmi pursuant tn nit urd' r
of the county court of the Htate of dn it'in, lor
Urook rounty, mule on (he tilh day of Novem
ber. 1911, he will, on the yth tiny of iR-ember.
mi, at Io o'clock in the fort-noon at the front
iliMir of the county courthouse in Pfiui-vtlle,
Oregon, Hell at public Mlt- to the hlttlienl bul
tter. subject to confirmation by Haul rounty
court, all the right, title ami interest the nl
John B. (iuxtafHon hit ft at the time of tiisuVath
in the followiug dem-rib! real estate, to wit:
The ami t hea t quarter of lection twenty-six In
township ilxtcen louth, of range ten east,
Willamette MTiiian in Crook Cuimty, Oregon.
Term ot Bale five per cent on la ol alu,
balance on date of confirmation.
Oated thin Wtb day of November, 1911,
M. R. Kl.unTT,
Administrator of the eat ate ol John H. buataf
iton, deceased.
On KxeciitUin In Korwltn.uri'i
In the Circuit Court of tho Mate of Oregon (of
me mumy oi irooK.
statu Hank of K edition. I, (a corporation.)
platullft, YiThodoro K. It.-rkner, c. K Ander
wii, c. k. Mitn, John ( lark. Saddlery t
Tally (a corporation.) and Marshall Wtdli
HaMwaro Omipaiiv (a corporation,) defend'
a lit.
Hy virtue or an execution, and order laal
imiiim out or the aiMivtf entitled court and
cau on h nth tUy nf (vcioImt, pjii, la favor
o. the above named plaintiff and agalttit the
above n"ed derudatila titHin a Judgment
ira ilia i inram unrnuanii, t neooore n. 1 1 r lc
tier and C K. NieUvn lor the mm uf elgnt
hundred fifty (tuoi) dot Urn with iutercai
thereon (nun the Ibthdayol iH'obrr.Wll at the
rate in ten ter cent per a ti num. and seventy flvr
7.t) d.dlaro attorney' few and lha further
urn of fifteen and 10-lwi dollars coatnamldka
tmremcnu; Mhlcb Judgment waavnrollrd and
dovketed tu the clerk's office ol aald court uu
the Itith day ol (Vtober, ivtl.
And whereas tt was further ordered and de
creed by the court that the following dfaenbed
premises, to-wit: The south hallol lot num
bered two, 'J, in block fifty five, of the origi
nal towns tie of Kodiuond, Oregon, as shown by
the recorded map and plat ot said townati on
tileaudof revord lu the office ot the county
clerk "f Crook comity, tftate of Oregon, in tn.
Ing the frame building uu the above deacritted
premises, together with all and singular the
tenements and hereditaments thereto belong,
ing or In anywise appertaining, situate and he
lug within the County ol crook and Htate of
i regou, be sold by the sheriff of salt t-ouuty as
under execution, and the proceeds of said sale
alter paying the costs and disbursement here
in, the accruing costs and expenses of sale, be
applied on lb? judgment herein, and luolfdi
vin e to said execution, order of nale and de
cree, notice is hereby given that have h-vtrd
upon the property above described audi will
on the
25ti -ay ol Neveaotf. 1911
the same being Mattirday of the week, at $
o'clock In the afternoon ol aald day, at the
front door of the courthouse In I'rlnevllle,
crm.k county, Oregon, sell to (he highest bid
der for cash, all of the right, title and interest
ol the said Theodore K. llerkuer, defendant
hereiu, in and to aald real property and prem
ises to satisfy aald Judgment, emu ami dis.
bursements, accruing costs, eipeuwra of sale
and attorney's fees, and said sale will be made
Mhjct to redemption In the manner provided
by law.
Dated tbls 17th day of October, Mil,
T V it s I Ifdi II
Watches! Watches!
Watches!
Howard, Elgin, Waltham, Hampdon,
Illinois, New York, Standard, Inger
soll, ranging in prices from $ I to $50
21
;1
t
ewe
1 V . 1
Laaies watcnes
Gold
Movements for $25.00.
from $12 to $45.
cases.
1IM9
tfhttrlri oi (;rtMk County,
i&
I HARNESS and I
SADDLERY I
I SHOP 8
Notice of Adaiuitratrii's Sale of Land.
Notice in hereby given by the unib-rtilgned,
the administratrix of the estate of Fletcher J.
Lively, deceased, that pursuant to mi order of
the county court of the mate of Oregon, for
(.Took county, made on the 0th day of Novum-i-r,
. he will, on the iHh day of Di'muber,
l'Jl I, at 10 o 'dock in the forenoon at th-front
door of the county courthouse in Prineville,
Oregon, sell at public sale to the hinkimt bid
der, subject to confirmation by auiil county
court, all the right, title and Interest the said
Fletcher.!. Lively had at the timeof hi death
in the following described real estate, to-wit:
I Attn eleven ami twelve in block thirty-five In
the original townnite of Redmond, Oregon, ac
cording to the pint thereof as the Hume ap
pears of record in the office of the count)'
clerk of crook County, Oregon.
T.ermH of srile, cardi upon confirmation of Hale
by county court,
Uutcd thin tfth day of November, roil.
Ann ib A. LivKt.y.
Administratrix of estate of Fletcher J, Lively,
deceased.
Notice for Publication.
Department of the interior,
U, B, Land Otllce at The ..alien. Oregon, i
November 3rd, I'Jll.
Notice Is hereby given that
Charier. . Coffin.
of I'rlnevllle, Oregon, who, on February Iflfh
mo, made homestead. No. OM-M, for SWU
section 21, township b' south, range 15 Bant,
tMiiKinctie .Meridian, nun men notice of in
tention to make final commutation nronf to
eMtnhlifth claim to the land above don-ribed,
belo re Warren Brown, county cleric at hirt of
fice, al I'rlneville, Oregon, on thu ltli duy of
December, l'-'U.
Cluimnnt. nam eft art vvltncanes: Ilcnry J, Kd
wardK, iMlton A Vales. ( unar (!. Clav'nool. Z.
T. oidtoti, all of Prineville, Oregon.
11-yp U. W. MOOKK, Ht'BistiT.
T-V "171 LODGK meet? nvery
vi KJm L Saturday night.
StrnuKcrB welcome. K.V. f'onntable, N. O.:
Wldd Humes, V. G.; II. L. Hubbft. Bee.; and
C. H. Dinwiddle, TreuB.
Chickens for Sale.
Thoroughbred White Wyandotte
ftooKtarn; about 24 Sinule Comb
White IKhoru CblitkciiH; 20 Buff
Lfghorn Ht;n. All thoroulibredM.
MltH. I' HKIl (.HI.ViKH,
H.D. STILL I
vj Prineville, Oregon Q
C.R. Henry
Resident Locator of
HOMESTEADS
in Southern Crook Co.
Address : : Paulina, Oregon
The Oregon Bar
At the Old Stand
G.W. Wiley & Co., Prps
All kinds of Choice Liquors
Wines and Cigars,
Famous Ranier Beer in
Bottles and on Draft
L. KAMSTRA, Proprietor.
Crook Countv Jewelry & Snortum
Goods Store, Prineville, Ore. I
..vA.OUY..Vi.lrJ.irJ
O. K. MARKET
Stroud & Stroud, Proprietors
Ii3
1
Si
ft
Choice Beef, Veal
Mutton and Pork
Butter and
Country rro
A Fine Line of Sausage
Telephone orders receive
prompt attention
Eggs
duce
ft
Begin Treatment Now
Rheumatism Can Be
Cured
A rMHi-M will brlnu you our
new Nmklut (IimhtIIiIhk HOT
LAKE SANITARIUM. Nam
ml Hot Mlimral llalliM, Nalur'
Curs for Khaumaliim. ur
I i 1 1 t 1 1-1 1 1 in i'iinplil. I'n-
iirpw(l Mwlical Stuff, Hut T.k Minprul Wator Curp Hliviuiintitm,
Stoiiinrh, Kiilncy, llluol ami Skin I)iiitiltr.
HOT LAKE SANATORIUM. . - Hot Lake, Oregon
WALTER M. PIERCE, Pres. and Mgr. i :'N
Oregon Trunk Ry Service
TO
Portland, St. Paul, Denver, Kansas City
Spokane, Chicago, Omaha, and St. Louis
DAILY TRAIN Leaves Redmond 7:21
a. m Opal City 8:00 a. m., . Culver 8:13
a. m., Metolius 8:30 a. m., and Madras
8:39 a. m., arriving Portland 6:00 p. m.
Direct connection at Fallbridge for Spokane and points east.
Arrive Spokane 9:45 p. m. Through tickets sold to Eastern
points, Puget Sound and other Western points. Deposits
accepted for west-bound tickets to be furnished persons in
the East. Details will be furnished on request.
N. BANK0L, Agent J. J. H0YDAR, Agent
Redmond, Oregon. 11-2 Madras, Oregon
aJL-j U JSLiLl
Shinglos, Mouldings, Windows,
Doors, Glasses, Etc. Etc., Etc
SHIPP & PERRY
PRINEVILLE, OREGON
J
11-10 2t iVinevllle, Or.