Children's Torn) Children's Career Dear Members: No league cards have yet arrived, so please continue to use this corner in your Bibles: Sunday. August 24 Luke 23. 13-26 Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, 23, 27-43 23, 44-56 24. 1-12 24. 13-24 2fi 28 29 30 24. 25-35 24. 3(5-53 Feed my Mothers, Jesus said lambs." Pick out a text for your little ones. Memorize (prizes at fair time): "Blessed are the happiness makers. Blessed are they that remove fric tion, that make the courses of life smooth, and the intercourse of men gentle. Yours sincerely, L. A. Hoi-LOWAY, M. A. Hadleigh College, School and Kindergarten Opens Sept. 1 in Jordan Building Principal, Mrs IA.ll olio w ay . M. A ., Honorman Scholar of Melbourne Vnlreralty, Australia, for elsht yours priuclpal of a largv college In Mel bourne. Assisted by a trained kin dergarten teacher and later on by other teachers. Piano Music, Miss B. Williams. Violin, Mrs. Fdwards. Fees, $5.00, $4.00 and $.100 per month according to grades. When members Increase fees will tie re duced. Scholars can be enrolled at 11: 30 a. m. and 5:00 p. tu , at Mr. Peterson's furniture exchange, opposite the Vnlon Church. HADLEIGH Jordan Building, Prineville College Home for the Public School Girls Dear Friends: Hfere is our Cot tage Boarding Home under a new name. We are now ready to receive ap plications for senior girls attending the high school or for junior girls attending the grammar school. I, myself, promise each and every jrirl a warm loving welcome, a mother's care and a tutor's help as a university graduate. We hope to have French and German spoken in the home and free conversation! elasses in both languages. Pianos will be available and Miss Williams of Oberlin Conservatory will attend the college for music pupils. Healthy amusements and social evenings will be arranged for our students and their friends. The charges are merely to meet bare expenses. Prof. Myers says he is ready and willing to give our Col fege Home his moral support. Students may enter the College Home under one of three proposi tions: 1. If students are willing to take their share in the general home work the charges are 75 cents per week for the Home accommoda tions with all its comforts and privileges, f 2 per week for food. 2. If students do not wish to do any house work or are too young to do so, an extra charge of f 2 per week will be made to pay another student to work for them. 3. Students can earn their own fees by working for juniors or extra payment students. All students are required to sup ply bed, bedding, house linen, crock ery for self, and one chair for com mon dining hall, and to conform to a few necessary home rules. The success of the College Home depends, dear friends, upon your appreciation of our ef forts on behalf of your girls. Please send in applications for admittSnce to the College Home at once if possible or not later than September 1. Address all letters to Mrs. Hollo way, Prineville, or call and see me at Furniture Exchange, opposite Union church, at 11:30 a. m. or 5 p. m. Yours sincerely, L. A. Holloway, M. A. Lost On the stage road between Sisters and Prineville, Tuesday, July 15, one ladv's small handbag. Leave with C. L. Shattuck, Prineville, and got reward 7-17 American Farmers May Profit by Experiences of European Nations Corvallis,Ore.,Aug.lS. Although American farmers have better agri cultural possibilities than those of any European nation, yet our crops are poorer than those of most European countries. This, at least, is the conclusion arrived at by Dr. Hector Macpherson, professor of political economy, Oregon Agricul tural College, who has just returned from a tour of thirteen European states. Dr. Macpherson is a member of the American commission, com posed of delegates from each of thirty-five states and four Canadian provinces, appointed to investigate rural conditions in Europe. He gave out the following unofficial state ment of his own personal observa tions and conclusions: "So far as I have noticed there is not one European country that of fers anything like the possibilities for agricultural production and hap py rural homes that are to lie found in America. Notwithstanding this, our crops are poorer, our methods of marketing more extravagant and our credit facilities more expensive than those of any European country. Likewise we are behind most ' of the European states in methods of rural education. On the other hand I feel certain that there exists no where in the old world a higher average of native ability than is to Special Session of City Council The city council met in special session Wednesday evening witn the following officers in attendance: Mayor Clifton, Councilmen Ward, dray, Shipp and Cooper; Lafollette absent In the absence of Recorder Bow man the mayor appointed H. A. Kelley to act as recorder. In regular order of business an ordinance "designating the manner of construction of certain sidewalks and defining the width thereof on both the business and residence streets of the city of Prineville and to provide a punishment for the violation thereof," came up for third reading. The ordinance was amended by the addition of section ' 4 and adopted; ballot by call of! roll. An ordinance "adopting plans and specifications for Portland cement sidewalks" came up for; first reading, and on third reading j for miles, while the tough pods by title was adopted by roll call of j open a little at every jump, drop ballot. I Diner a few hundred or thousand The council instructed the re-' corder to advertise for bids for the j bears about 1,500,000 seeds, construction of 1667 lineal feet of ; which are covered with resisUnt curb, 16,500 square feet of five-j seed coats and retain their vi inch concrete walk, 453 square feet ; tality for 10 to 15 years, germi of five-inch concrete roadway and ' nating only when brought near 14 fifty-six foot stone crosswalks, to be completed before November 1, 1913. City Marshal Coon was instructed to enforce the state law requiring the destruction of noxious weeds on , streets and private and public prop erty, and to cause to be published a notice to property owners to effect. that ! The matter of filling or repairing the city cisterns was allowed to go over. Council adjourned. Will Exchange for Wood. If you have wood and want a Hew ing Machine, don't wait any lonirer. We have the New Home, the New Royal and Konlta that we will trade you. All firet-claHH machlncH. M. Kainatra, the Jeweler, Prineville. 6-26 Wanted Reliable woman or girl for permanent position in email family in countrv. In ijuire this oflice. 7-31tf Wood for Sale. Wood for tale at 14.75 and : a cord at tli e yard; 50c extra per conl de livered. P. L. &. W. Co. Mil For Sale A mutch team of blm-k liorwn, 5 mil 6 yearH old. See Chan. F. Con dart. 8-7tf For Sale Cheap Six lots with good house, barn and outbuilJiriirn, all under fence and im proved. Also ban ehada trees anil a good gurdnn. Address lock box 444 or inquire at thin office. 7-.'il be '.ntnd upon American farms. The average American farm home affords a higher degree of comfort and luxury than is to be found in the average farm homes of Europe "The farmers of Europe were compelled to adopt scientific meth ods of farming and co-oierative systems of marketing. Likewise they were forced to resort to co operative institutions for a supply of I value on dry farming lands is to credit. Small farmers had been re- j Sl)oJ I"'' 1 of tlie frm ,0 alfalfa duced to the verge of starvation''" drill rows. Hires feet apart, before co-operative methods were ! Tlie lfIh iiV then ! cultivated accepted. Once put into practice, j 80 thoroughly that at the end of however, these methods rescued the European farmer from abject nv erty and placed him in a condition of prosperity. In America our prosperity has been the great obstacle to the adop tion of scientific methods in farm ing and economical systems of finance and marketing. But we should not wait until driven by grim necessity; rather should we act from an intelligent desire to im prove present conditions. When American farmers are as careful in their methods of cultivation and as thoroughly organized for market- mg. insurance and finance as ar .he 1 small farmers of Europe, American agriculture will have obtained a prosperity exceeding anything to be found in the old world." Oregon Agricultural College. How to Kill Jim Hill Mustard "If all the jackrabbits of Ore gon were confined to the Co lumbia river basin they would do less damage to the wheat fields than the tumbling mustard is now doing," says Professor Scudder, agronomist of the Ore gon Agricultural College. "In many fields it reduces the yield one half and throughout the en tire wheat belt it is rapidly grow ing worse. Farmers are begin ning to count the cost per acre, and when put into dollars and cents it runs very high. Al though he may not have realized it, the damage it does the wheat grower is the heaviest tax he hus to pay. "This 'Jim Hill' mustard is a bad weed Dest for these reasons: It is common throughout eastern Oregon. When ripe the bead of the plant breaks off and blows seed. A full grown normal plant the surface. The plant is a very ; heavy feeder upon soil food and 'moisture and hastens soil de ! pletion. And it makes harvest ! difficult and to some extent in- iu res the feedintr value of the crop. "In the work of eradication farmers should cooperate. Waste places should be clipped land burned before the seeds ripen. In draws and the lee of Hills where it collects it should be burned. Fences that cross jthe direction of prevailing winds may have two wires strung on cleats nailed to the tops of the post, to help catch and hold the traveling weeds. Railway com panies will be able to cooperate with the farmers, and clean their rights of way. Seed of grain crops should be entirely free of the mustard seed. Badly in fested crops should be harvested with headers, as the combined harvesters scatter the weed seeds. "Following the harvest, the field should be thoroughly disced with the double-action type of machine that will best chop down the stubble and prepare a shallow seed bed in which the seeds will mostly sprout at the first rain fall. The young plants may bo dcit roved) befor winter by a second discing. In very foul ground another crop of weeds will come up In the follow ing spring, and llio discing should be repeated. Most of the seeds remaining In the ground will be brought up by the disc ing and may bo effectually de stroyed in the early summer plowing. This treatment will not only destroy the mustard, but most other weeds as well. It also saves the moisture and adds humus to the soil. "Another method of great the year ths field will be entirely free from weeds of any kind. If ths best strains of alfalfa are seeded thrt succeeding crop, harvested for seed, will bo worth more than the wheat crop. At the end of three or four years the field for this crop may bo moved to another section of th farm, until the entire farm 1st cleaned up. "When the weed is first at tacked iu bad areas tho iron sulphur spray should prove of great assistance. Hut nothing C!l" ,ake lhe .l',ftce of cultivated 1 r"l r cu.uMiie., summer nil- low in tho extermination of weeds." Work Progressing at Clear Lake Geo. S. Ed mond stone, chief engineer for the Oregon Electric Railway on their 45'tKM horse power Hydro Electric plant that is under development at Clear Lake, was iu Sisters Saturday and states that development work is progressing at a very satisfactory rate and will be rushed ahead with additional help until the first of November or possibly later when it is ex pected to have the preliminary development work completed so as to be ready to start actual con struction work as soon in the spring as men and supplies can be landed at the lake. Mr. Ed mondstono expressed himsel as being well pleased with Sisters as a mail and supply point and says the road from here to the lake is much better than ho hud expected to find it. The project now has its own team which puts them in a po sition to send out for a small load of supplies at any timo. Mr. Edmondstone took in hi family and a small load of sup plies last Sunday and tho first assistant engineer, CO. Davolt. ! will be out this week after his 1 family and more supplies. This j means quite an addition to the j revenue of Sisters and has ul j ready amounted to quite a sum. j Sister9 Herald. Noxious and Other Weeds Growing Within the City Must be Destroyed. To whom it may concern: Kvery owner or occupier of landa within the city of Prineville in hereby notified that all noxioue and other wends found growing upon their landa, including to the center of the atrent ad jacent lo eaid land or landa, MUST IIK CUT AM) DKHTKOVKl) within TKN daya from the issuance of thia notice. A failure to cut and destroy audi weeds within eaid time will result in prosecu tion before the recorder's court. Here in fail not at your peril. Dated and signed August 21st, lUKt. T. L. Coon, 8 21-lt City Marshal. Lumber for Sale Rough lumber of all kinds, good qual ity, for eale at the Russell Saw Mill on Vezie Creek. Also 16-inch wood at $1.25 a load. A load means all that two horses can pull. Don't forget the place. 7-17 Laundry Leave Your Laundry nt Dick Dnr Muk'h barber ehop. Sent to licnd every Mo idu.v. Luckey lioniiy, local HKcnt. Notify him find be will call for It. 7-1! J. IOdwahI) Lauhon. Timber Claim for Sale Timber claim, 10 miles from Prine ville for sale cheap for cash. Apply to S. A. Prose, Prineville, Ore. 5 2!llmpd For Trade. 40 acres one mile from Oregon City to trade for irrigated land. Hee 1). 11. Pkoi'Lkh, Adarnsun bldg. 7-24-tf Fur fine Onk Refrigerators A. II. I.lppmun & Co. 6 12 Public .Snlo. I'niUr and by virtue nf in nrdr made by lion. ti. Sirlnier, Judg ul pronai conn ol l rook county. Oregon, lli undoralauml, admiiitatratrtx nf lh estate ol Herman lucli, dsoraaed, will on Salwday. Aaeait JOtk, lll, 111 in it I hk at 2 o'clock p. in., aell at public auction lor mail, the following deecrlheil personal pnerly belonging to Mid ratal: tin '.'V'tu-li l'ni wagon, Aim Mt medium harneaa, una walking breaking plow, one lnnir,iiiii rsk. on plalloriu calc. on two aec turn harrow, on spring toolh harrow, ono liny rack, one set single harneaa, one raae of dynamite, 1ft hum-lira of shiuglca, nit nirn plantar, mitt lot of mining tools, 0110 hit ul steel tra, one iron bedstead, una dresser, rhaira, tahh'a, oua lining, una lot of 1 it ra. mounted deer borne, and olhar article loo numerous tu mention. A Imi oua lot of peraonal pruerty l longing to tiaylord Mriniil, liii'liiillug a lot of tloora, ihtor raaiuga, window aah and window caning. Said sale will h mad at the Herman I'ih'Ii raiti'li. 2J milre rail 1 1 I'rin.iville, Oregon,, lor caah In hand, ami the pro ceed applied lo th payment of the indehtrdnea against said ratals. Signed, KannuC I'im 11, Administratrix. W. II. Kinder, auctioneer. H-21 2t Call for Bids The rilv of Prineville, Oregon, will receive hid for ltW lineal feel ol curb, liWuHl square fret ol live-liu'li concrete walk, 4l )iiara loot ol Hve-lm-h i-on-i-rnte roadway, and II liflyalx foot stone eroea walks, to t built ami com pleted on or liefor November I, Itfl.t. All hiili to lie accompanied by a rerli lleil chock nf one-txiilh ul the total amount ol hi. I ami dnlivenul to Ilia elty rnoonlrr on or hvlore the am-ond ilay ol Sfplrinber, I'.IIU. IU' la will he oneil al (he regular miMMing ol th council, Kiitmhr 'i. HU:l. The council roetvia (ha right to rr)cl any ami all tittle. I'lant ami aiecinValiona are on 61 at the ollic of the I'ortlaml Orrgonlan, the Ileml bulletin, and the oilU-e ul th city engineer ol I'llneville, Oregon. Approved : li. N. I'Limm, Signeil: Mayor. II. A. Kiiuar, S 21-2 Acting Knronler. SlIIIIIIIOIIH. ' In the circuit court of the "late of Oregon, for Crook county. Ruth lirahatn, plaintiff, Vi. Archie lirahatn, defendant. To Archie (irahatn, dtilemlant elxiva named : Id the name of th atate of Oregon you are herely required to appear and anawer th complaint Hlwl againat you in th ahov entillrd action on or lie foreaix (ti) werkt from the date of the Drat puhlication of thta uminona ami if you fall to to apiear and anawer aaid comrlaint the plaintiff will apply to the court (or the relief prayed lor in her complaint, namely, for a dm-rea of the court iliaaolvuig tli marriage contract exlating between plaintiff and drleml ant ami for audi oilier and further re lief aa to the court may anem eipiitah'e and j tint. Thia umrnona ia act vol up on you by puhlication once a week fur ix (61 conarctitiv weeka in the Crook County Journal, a newapaprr ol weekly circulation ptihliaheil at l'rineville In Crook county. Oregon, by virtue of an order of the above entitled court made and entered on the li'lli day ol Auguat, I'.'l.l. The date of the II rut publication of thia auminoui in eaid uuaapaHr ia Auguat 21, 1D1X Staiiic t Haxikit, Attorney for I'laintiff. Spend Your Money Where You Make It By HOLLAND. MONEY that I kept In the community hclu every one In that community. It la a part of the common fund on which any 0110 with any thing to aell merchandise, InUir, farm prodiict-cnn draw. Money that la sent away from homo Is with drawn from this common fund. It helps to Impoverish the entire community. Send all tho money nveny and all the people hi the community would he "broke." The dollar that you spend with the local men-hunt will continue to circulate In the nclghlmrhood. pnylng lawyer, doctor, blacksmith, carpenter, teacher. Ultimately It may return to you to be again started on Its Journey of pur chase and payment The dol lar sent to the mull order house goes to swell the bank account of a concern In Chi cago or New York. It Is lost to your community forever. Your neighbor can't get It ami you will never see It again Can't yon see that self In terest tells you to do your buying at home? Can't you see that It la the part of wis dom to spend your ' dollar where you are likely to get It ngiiln? The advertisements In this paper will aid you In decid ing where to make your pur chase. Only the more re liable merchantH enn afford to advertise contlntioiiHly, and only the better grade of goods can stand such publicity. VlHltor Are you going to get a new hat? Congressman's Little Daughter t don't know yet Mamma has passed the appropriation, but I'm awfully afraid papa will veto it. Ho Is oppos ed to every bill we joud In.-llrooklyn Citizen. Sfosscia Cards. W. I". Mvkrs N. 11. Waiuh MYERS & WALLACE Lawyers Kamatr Bld'f , PrinavilU, Or Abstract. Ineumiice- The J. H. Haner Abstract Co. lnrriraiiMl Prineville, Ore. Knriii I.oHiia. Iliind. Prof. A. W. Grater, Divin Hralar , Olllc In Morris lliuhllng thro doors smith of Journal ullice, Prinvvill. Oragon D. II. PEOPLES Civil and Irrigation Engineer Uoom II .VUmaou llld'g Prineville, Ore. IDJ Dr. Howard (Jove Dentist Crook County Bank Building J... MOT. Orfm. (M'Cl'I.IMTM tfttlknap d Cdwards PftJtmmt mm Jmrfmi. (County I'hyalciau.) PrimtrJIU. Ormgmm fi"irj."nui;i:v" WucMaaur l W. A. Iti-ll) I'kinivius . . . Uatoos C C. Sri Jtttfrmtg-mt-Xmm Sfa Ctmtm Cornett llulldliig, Union 6 3kr,mm mm Jm CaLta AxavsatD Paonrri.t !r oa Nii omca onb tiooa aorta np a da mbum'i Use irmii. Hulh nm,- aa raj dnc uloiihouaa. V '. . . Ormrmm if. Cliutt, Jfltmrmtjfmt-jCmmt 9m mill; Ormfn. Willard II. WirtaT Atturney-nt-I.iiw. OllU-e Iu M. It. Ulggs' nlllce. I'lllNKI II.I.K OlllliiiiN , SBrim jCaurytr !Primmillm, Jf ttrmtt. Ortfm. J. Trendies Fox 11 r u v..... ....1 tux 1 . - ... . . ... ,,, n, , , ,,11111111; ,1. .1.. 41 ,1 1 u no-,-,-"ri-Lruii ,-inie .iieoicni lioaril, SpeilnllH iu .Surgery; llyglcna; All irnury l anal; woiiu-n and rhildri-u'a menti di Mi-rnai-a. 'ic. 1 utlw and riMrtmio" Thlnl alre,-t near Court Dona, Tel.: I'loiwr, t'Hlla aii"won-it imiiiiptly. ills lit or ilny. rtinnrra moiti-ral Notice ol Mici 111 Snlu. In the county court of the stale of Oregon for the county of Crook. Jack llrogan vs. Philip llrogan. Uy virtue of an attachment execution issued out ol the above entitled court, a decree and order of sale, hearing the seal of eaid county court for the county of Crook, to me directed, and dated the 12th day of Auguat, HUM, commanding me to satisfy a judgment obtained against tho alaive named defendant, Philip llrogan, on the 12th, day of August, llMIl, for the tnin of Three Hun died l'our and Hixty Hun dredths Hollars, with interest thereon at the rate ol tl per cent per annum from the 12th day of August, llll.'l, and the further sum of Twenty dollars costs and accruing coats, for the order of sale commanding me to make sale of the one-tenth interest uf the above Daniel defendant, Philip llrogan, In the tub lowingdescribed property, to-wit: An undivided one-tenth interest in the west half of the northeast quarter, the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter and the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section thirty live, in township nine south, range seventeen east of the Willamette Meridian In Crook county, Oregon, 1 will on Saturday, September 13, 1913, at the hour of 2 o'clock p. m., soil at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in band, all the right, title and interest which the defendant, Philip llrogan, had on the 12th day of August, llli:i, or now has in the above described real property, or as much as will satisfy eaiil judgment, with the costs and ac cruing COHtS. Said sale to be subject to confirma tion and redemption as bylaw provided, liBted at Prineville, Oregon, this 12th day of August, 1111:1, It'uank Ki.kinh, Sheriff. lly V. K. Van Allen, deputy. Board of Equalization Meeting The Ounty Hoard of Kqmilization for Crook countv convenes Monday, Sep tember H, llli:i. Tax rolls will be open lor inspection and correction in the wa of description and valuation. Dated this 1 lib day of August, 1111:1, II. A. I'OSTKII, Assessor fur Crook County, Oregon.