PROFIT IN FARM BEEF PRODUCTION To produce beef on the farm I be lief that (he farmer must raise his own cattle. There Is too much ba ard in buying rattle to feed. To raise cattle for feeding there are three ma jor Items for consideration-Brat, pas ture aud feeL These must le procld ed. writes T. G. llanej In Kansas Farmer. Pasture, wlieu properly han dled, is the most economical feed for stock and can be made to rebuild the oil at the same time. Second consideration Is (lie cows. To get together a profitable herd of beef producing cows 1 believe will be more difflcult than gelling a dairy herd and will take longer. A twenty five cent pair of scales will tell you within a mouth or so after the cow comes fresh whether she will be a profitable milker or not But with the beef cow the calf must le rut on feed to determine whether she will be a profltable producer or not With the beef cow the question of the proper type to cross to be made also enters. Also I believe that a cow may not produce her best calves while young. Next come the bulls. Here ngaln is hard proposition. None of us will buy a poor fleshed bull, and we can Dot tell by looking at the fat bull whether he put the fat on easily or whether it tools a skilled feeder months to put it on. Two years ago I bought six bulla for our herd, most- Aberdeen Angus cattle raising la a comparatively new department of (arm Industry In the United States. Few breeds of domestic animals have been transferred from their native land to this country under auspices so favorable. The earlier Importations were made by thoae who. having an excellent knowl edge of Aberdeen Angus merit, had also the business acumen and cap ital to obtain animals of highest quality. The great popularity of the breed is a credit to the Scotch breeders who developed it- Indeed, less than 100 years ago the Aber deen Angus as such, with the pe culiarities now considered charac teristic, was not in existence. It is but little more than a quarter of a century since the first Importation of Aberdeen Angus cattle reached America. These went to the then prairies of Kansas and were the seed from which has grown a most wonderful crop of beef producing cattle. The Angus bull Illustrated is a fine specimen of the breed. ty twos and threes. I did the best I could, judging by appearances in the ring and stall. I got one that will hardly fatten In the feed lot I got another that is in good shape all the time, a hustler In every sense. We put the bulls on feed after taken from pasture to get them up In shape, and, while they are thinner than when they "went on the pasture, the good feeder very soon gets back in shape. The one has made more than twice the gain that the other has this fall. Every farm should have a small herd of beef cattle to eat up the rough age, or what may be called waste of the farm. If tbey are the proper In dividualspure bred, carefully select ed and given reasonable treatment they will make a proflt out of waste and help solve two other problems high cost of living aud fertility main tenance. Sunburned Hogs. The high temperature of summer will cause trouble In many herds of hogs. In the case of white hogs there is likely to be a great deal of blister ing, but even with hogs of other colors there will be more or less sunburnlng. There should be no delay, therefore, to putting the hogs through the dip ping vat or in giviug them a good wetting with a sprinkling can or spray pump. Any of the commercial coal tar dips are ideally adapted to this purpose, and a few ga'luns used on a bunch of hr.es during the sum mer season will contribute immense ly to the economy of gain In those cases where the skin from any cause whatever gets out of emidition. In real warm weather it Bill pay and pay well to round up the young pigs every ten days or two weeks and give them a thorough wetting. Feed the Miil-.maker. Don't stop feeding tijc uairy cows Just because they cm gorge them selves on green grass. Furnish them with a little gTain and roughage right along through the entire summer and consider tbat it enriches the milk flow, keeps the animals In farmer llch and saves pasturage. i Feed Grain to the Calf. . Don't ntteuipt to raise the calf on skimmllk alone, but get ii to e:itina Final! grain and clean clover or alfalfa J 1st as soon as possible to help supply womethlng to take the place of the cream that has been extracted from the Ljiik it drinks. Water For th Cow. "Water is a necessary constituent of milk, and the cow must have It during the time It is being manufactured. The best plan Is to hnva a supply where she co n have access U It at .ill tln:es. V vv -, i DUAL PURPOSE CATTLL . Point of Excellence Claimed For the Red Polls. The Red rolls are the supposed farmer's row first, because the great bulk of farmers live by diversities. It Is often "catch as catch can." Often It is too wet or too dry, too hot or too cold, for a crop to mature perfectly or sutlldently for food or reproduction. Stock the farmer must hare for labor, food and fertility. There are success ful specialists among farmers, and there are special breeds worthy of all honor bestowed by enthusiasts, but I Rett Poll cattle are advocated es pecially tor their combination milk and bf value, says C S. Plumb of the Ohio Agricultural college, la England Red Toll herds have mad much better showings In milk pro duction than In America. Th beat Red Poll record In England that the writer Is aware of is 13. LS pounds for 547 days. Th best rec ord of Red Poll cattls under teat In America in uvs was of the cow Gold Drop, with a record for th year of U.SSS't pounds of milk and (10.03 pounds of butter fat. Frank ly speaking. Red Foil cattl ar not recognized as the equals of either the Shorthorn or Angus In beef pro duction. Th Red Poll cow shown her was champion at th Suffolk show In England. the average farmer Is by necessity re quired to "average up" at the eud of the year, and those things that meet his environments best he soon learns are his standby, writes John & Ilia show In Kuml New Yorker. Therefore we claim the dual cow and especially the Red Polls are best suited to the conditions on the great majority of farms east, west uortb and south. We are proving this every year by records in milk, butter and beef. It has been proved by 'public test over and over again, both here and In Eng land, that the dual cow often ranks first with any competing breed. The dual cow will often thrive where a dairy bred one would sicken and die. They (the Red Pollsi eat brush, weeds, coarse fodders and damaged and over ripe hay that would go to waste If fed to the more delicate dairy cow. The elements of the weather and In sufficient shelter do not shrink the dual cow to a shadow like ber dairy sister, though care and feed are ap preciated by these rattle, and profltable returns are often the result of care and proper nourishment Cows average from C.0OO to 10.000 pounds of milk per year, with butter variations from 300 to 500 pounds an nually. Many cows with special care are capable of going far beyond this; but as a rule, they are supposed to hustle much of their own living and help keep the family on the wastes of the farm. The dual steer properly handled often tops the market side by side with the beef bred brother and is a valuable asset over the dairy steer In the farmer's feed lot Last but not least of the good merits of the Red Polls, nature has been kind to them and ns In giving them a beautiful hornless head. Alfalfa For Hogs. When fattening bogs for market some Colorado experimenters found that a ration consisting of three parts of corn and one part of alfalfa was very satisfactory. For young bogs which were being kept for growth one part of com and three parts of alfalfa seemed to give best results. It will thus be seen that alfalfa can be made the principal ration for bogs that are not being prepared for market. Even when put in the feed lots It Is profita ble to feed a little alfalfa in connec tion with the grain. It enables the animals to assimilate more freely the feeds that are given for laying on flesh. THE SWINEHERD. 7 & If sows are expected to raise a Z, fall litter It Is best to wean the y spring pigs at from eight to ten Z weeks old. y If the pigs are allowed to re- main with the sows too long and J no attention paid to teaching y tlir-m to eat they pull the sows z iuwu uuriei'essaniy. nnu mis y means a loss. In such cases the sows would be In no condition y for producing fall litters. Z The young sows that ore to be y kept for breeders must be noi- Z united at weaning time from y those that are to be fattened for Z, market y There should be placed In ev- Z cry pig yard and pasture a box j with salt, charcoal, air slaked Z, lime, bone meal and hard wood " ashes so the pigs can help them- selves at will. y It Is necessary lhat pigs have Z. a variety of food If they are y expected to make rapid growth. Z, They must have bone forming feed ns well as fut forming. Z, Aifu Ifii has proved a splendid ration fur hogs that are thin or y a little off feed. Fur the greatest profit the pigs 'y should grow rapidly from birth Z, to market d:iy. I A CHICK FOUNTAIN. Can Be Mad by Anybody, and the Lit tie Ppr Enjoy It Immensely. Mere's an Ingenious little fountain for keeping a constant supply of wa ter for youthful i hli kens. It Is simple in the extreme to make, and any boy who rati use a nv and drive a nnll can make one In nn hour. Just take two pieces of board, one sis inches siptaro tind the other tl by 12 and null them so as to form a right tingle, tict an old milk Imttle and nnll two thiu FOl'NTUM 0:t ('HICKE.NB, strips of tin so that the bottle will slip easily In and out and remain support ed head dowu. Thou nail the lid of a tlu can under the mouth of the bottle, and enough water will escne to keep the little re ceptucle always full and bu handy for the chicks to get at whenever they want to liquidate their little bills. It goes without saying that the contrap tion should be kept lu a cool, shady spot WANT REAL jARCELS POST. Entirely Too Much Energy Wasted on Road From Town to Country. As to some products of the farm, tln'i-e is a difference of 40 to BO per cent between the price that the grower receives and the price that the con sumer pays. There are even cases In which this price difference amounts to 300 icr cent. Part of tho loss Is due to a had system of retail distribution, as when a dozen city milk wagons travel over the same route, each de livering one bottle here and another bottle there, when one wagon might as well make all the deliveries along the route. This same wasto appears even more markedly between the farm and the town. How many fully loaded wagons do you pass In driving to town? From a dozen farms a dozen packages of butter, poultry or vege tables may go to town the snmo morn ing, each In a different vehicle. Every day a dozen parcels of merchandise are hauled out of town along the same road In a dozen different conveyances, and the time and labor of eleven men and eleven Iiotmm go for nothins. The rural free delivery mall wagon now comes to your house with n load that yon could put In on? or two bushel baskets, and It goes back to town with an even smaller load. Under present conditions It bioks as If the postofflro department was not giving tho farmer hi money's worth. Country Gentle man. i Live Stock Notes. I Do yon oe the whip became yon ! have It bandy? I Are you humane in the treatment of I the animals you drive? A horse's pulse beats from thirty-six to forty times a minute when ha Is in i health. A mule Is no more prone to kick than ! a horse unless he is taught to do so by 1 bad treatment. ; Are you one of the unthinking who : starts n horse with a blow Instead of ulng your voice? ho you want a balky horse? Ton i can easily have one by giving him 1 too heavy loads to draw, j If the horse must be kept in (he barn ' during hot weather keep all the doori ' and windows wide open. I Oats Is the most ierfect all round : feed for horses at any time of the ! year. liarley Is a close second. 1 It Is a good sign to see a pair of ; scales In the stable, but you have to use them to get any good from them, j Carrots must be fed sparingly to ; working horses. Cut them In slices, j They are a laxative, and aTact the ! kidneys also. ' , 1 I.op off the ration of all kinds when J the horses are doing little or nothing, i They are too much like a man to stand heavy feed while lying still. 1 Stuffing the colt with hay or straw ! or liny coarse feed will spoil lis looks. Keep this ration down by the use of some grain and less coarse feed. Watch the hired man with your horses. If they cringe, dodge or show signs of fear while wllh him, take my iidvl'o and "fire" him. A good horse Is spoiled when he Is a victim of fear. Ioii't make your horse wall till ho la .-wiled off b( fore you give him a drink. Ti ke n couple of quarts In a pnll aud give tint. Then wait n while and give as nuK li more, fly this you will save a lot of snlTerltig' on tho part of your liorso and he will come out all right too. f3 ' " Call for County Warrants. Scalp bounte rratitr up tu and lu- rinding No. tU:l are called lor payment. Interest slop on thl date. ' K. I.. JiisiiAx, I'ounty treasurer lUted tins lit day ol Mirtiarv, lull. Notice of School District Bond Sale Notice Is hereby given, by the tinder, signed, the futility Treasurer of lb i'ounty ol f rook, State ol Oregon, that, pursuant to ail Older of the Hoard ol Director ol S'hool District No. :i., d f rook fount)', tlrogon, we will sell for the Iwst price obtainable I'KH) six r cent IhuhIs ol said district on or alter the .IMh dv of Kebrnarvk IIM2, at the oihce ol the futility Treasurer In I'rlne ville, Oregon. Kr further information, apply to the Hoard of Director of Mid district. latrd this Sth day of February. 1PI2 li. I.. Joiihas, foiinty Tress. Sheriff Sale. On I'sectilion lu Koreelusure. In the Circuit fourt of the Mala of Oregon, for the County ol Crook. Kalpli I'otlllv. plaintiff, vs. Ollle I.. Kb h'lson and Nellie II. Kllelson, defend ants. i'o the sheriff olf rook county, tireotlng: W hereas, on the H'th day ol O. t . Hill, in the above tisniel court, a jndg- j nient was rendered In favor ol the above named plaintiff and against the j atxive named defendant (or Sis Hiin-j tired and Fifty Ihillar, with Interest : thereou from tl.a lull day of Feb., llalU, at the rate ol 8 per cent per annum and Scvent v-th lollr attorney's fee, and the further sum of Fifteen iKillars costs vhii'h judgment was enrolled and dock eted in the clerk's olliee of said court in said county on tho l'Jth dav ol Oct., ltll. And whereas, it was further ordered and decreed by the court that the northeiist quarter of the soothe! quarter of section sixteen In township fifteen south of lange sixteen east of Willamette .Meridian In Crook county. Oregon, he sold by th slierill of said ountv as under execution, and the pro ceeds of such sale, alter paving the costs, disbursements, attorney' Ices and expense herein stilted, shall lie applied uiHin the judgment, and if the proceeds of such sale tie iusullicietit, the plaintiff shall have judgment and execution against the dcletiilauts, Olhe l Fllefsoti and Nellie 11. r.llvUm to recover such balance unpaid, notice is hereby given that I have levied iiiumi the prop. rty above described aud I will on the 16th .r f Msrct. 1912, the same being Saturday of the week, at '.' o'clock in tho alternoon of said day. t the Irout dour of th courthouse in Prineville. Crook county, Oregon, sell lo the highest bidder lor rash, nil of the ght, title and intere-t of the said Ollle 1.. F.llefmin and Nellie II. Kllafson, de fendants herein, in and to said real rotwrtv and premises to satisfy ahl judgment, costs and dishiirteimmt, ac cruing costs, expenses of sale ami at lornev s lees, and said sale will le made subject to redemption ill tlietuau- ner provuliHl by law. Dated this loth dav ol January, I'.il.'. T. X. liu-roca, 2 1.1 Sheriff of Crook county. rf ( 1.1 I.OIXIk iiiiii every - . P . Malurilii HdthL Htmngers welcome, (I. I. Reams, N. O.; O. 1, Hhatiork. V. (I.: Hurt Harm's, See.; and C. 11. Dinwiddle. Trena. The Brosius Bar Finest Brands of Wines, Liquors and Cigars. LAGER BEER ON DRAUGHT F. E. BROSIUS, Proprietor 1 " RECEPTION " Smith & Allingham, Props Champ (Smith's old stand. Imported and Domestic Cigars Famous Whiskies Old Crow; Hermitage; Red Top Rye; Yellow Stone; Canadian Club; Cream Rye; James E. Pepper; Moore's Malt. Porter, Ale and Olympia Draft Beer on Tap. Imported Wines an Liquors. IIS " jj 1--- FOSTER Who Said Hard Times? If you trade with us, and take into consideration the quality, quantity, etc., you won't notice any delterence in times. 0. K. MARKET Stroud & Stroud, Proprietors r $ .'-'iBi' ri . ... hi. A-t.il surpassed Medical Staff. Hot l.ske Mineral Water Cure lilivuinallsm, rHomach, Kidney, Wood and Skin lhsortler. HOT LAKE SANATORIUM, - . Hot Lake, Oregon WALTER M. PIERCE, Pr.s. and Mgr. tf-'JH Low Fares West SPRING COLONIST PERIOD Daily March 1st to April 15th ALL CENTRAL .. ('hlcnito .. ('Iiii'liinntl Milwaukee Ht. Lntila ...v New York... .... Detroit .$.'l.'l.0O .. :i.lHI . Hl.W) .. !I2.(K) .. MUM) .. IW.OO f From flther F.iiatern Point In Proportion. Tell your friends In the Knat. of thin opportunity of movlnir West nt low rnti'M. Direct train aervlce via lliirllnirton lioiite, Northern I'lU'lllc, Ureal; Northern, "North Itnuk" anil Oregon Trunk KhIIwii.vh. You can deposit funila with tnu and went bound tlcketa will lie fur nlHlied people In the Kimt. DetitllH will lie furnished on requeHt. W. E. COM AN, Gen'l Freight & Pass. Agent, Portland, Or. 2 ltf H. BAUKOL, Agent, Redmond, Oregon. T4 Gaaaa THE HAMILTON STABLES J. H. WIGLE, Proprietor , PRINEVILLE, OREGON Stock boarded by tbe day, week or month at Reasonable rates. Remember us when in Prineville, Rates Reasonable. We have Fine Livery Rigs For Rent 8 5 MS Watch the Journal Piano Contest Natty Neckwear how the good tnste of a gen He lium. Men (if discrimination buy their Nccktlc ntul other Under buslirry here, biriiiise they get the newest styles III the best itlnlltlc. We are now showing th new aeuaoti aliiide In futicy Neckwear, l'lenslng !) vol Hi 111 designs mill colorings. Come In nuil look over our atock you will be glud you m-ccptcd (he 1 n v 1 1 tit Inn. . & HYDE t V: I". M a Begin Treatment Now Rheumatism Can Be Cured A reiinsl will bring you our low Ismklct describing HOT LAKE SANITARIUM. Natu ral Hot Miiioral Until. Nature's Cur for Bhsumstitm. lUir itiiiptniint is loiiiplet. I'n- .To OREGON POINTS ON. ouThRy. CENTRAL OREGON LINE FROM - 8t. 1'iuii r-.oi) KntiHUM city 'i:m (lmnliii ... 25.00 DesMollie. ... .Hft Inilliiniipulls ... So 15 Denver 25.00 8 til - s 3