Columbia Semi-Malleable Range I In the Columbia Range, we believe we are offering one of the very best and most attractive ranges made. Its a sanitary range. No place for dirt and scrubbing water to lodge year after year until the dirtiest place in the house is under the kitchen range, as is the case with all ranges running to the floor. It is a handy range, too. The polished top makes it easy to clean. The lift-up plate in front makes it handy to empty trash, etc. The damper handle in front is always cool. We are selling these ranges at a very low figure considering quality and will put them out on the easy payment plan. WE WOULD BE GLAD TO HAVE YOU CALL AND MAKE A PERSONAL INSPECTION ) vmfSA J. E. STEWART & COMPANY Powell Butte MUh JuHNtv Nkt'ln wu a lioiiit'-eom-lug imHHoiiKiT on Tutwiluy'" train tram I'ortliiiul, where tiu liml Itccii the iiiMt mouth. Mini Nkclu In en tirely ncoverml from Hit' effect of licr recent operation for iipponcllcltlH. (!co, ltruice, Henry Tweet, Ievt Krrmut, Mclvln Fouler, Jtcevea Wil coxen und J. E. Warner were Towrll Hutte pork producers' who ulilppecl hog to l'ttrtlnuil Tueatlny. Tim lietluuind Union Wim-hoti' Imil eh 11 run of the ulitpment. Allen WIU'oxi'ii mill III Inther-lii-lliw, tiro. II. Hoe, wert) Hencl vlnltom Weil mutiny. A. W. Iliiyn wn Prineville vln Itor Frldiy. Minn lliizi'l iiceoiii pmilfd tier duller homo (or a wwl vnd vIhII with homo folk. Uohi lliiMMflt In recovering from a never attm-k of liiiimpn. How !) they will Imvts to go hiiiiih to get Id tn tti contract another ciue ( inuiiipti. Ik nay thu contract U itilHlctulliig. MIm Ktfn I.lnilijiilMt returned from Itednioml Friday where alio lim lieen (or thu pimt two weeks awtlmt Ing with thu revival meetings at U- MfthodlMt church. Mltm Ltiit1u(t In au uccouiplthcd vooiillMt. Mnt. Mary I'nlco. who hit lw vlitlttng her (uthcr, D. Mitncean.for thu punt two uiotithN, left (or hr koine la Tttconm Friday. A number of Indie gathered at Uie LlndijillHt home Tuiitvdny uftcratHiu for thu purpoHU i orgiiiiuuig u Ladles' Aid itoclety. The Indies will meet with Mru. Humphrey Thursday ot thin week. A. II. Kolidc, who tonka car ( Hhecp to Portland liwt week, hn rt turned home utter a pletumut week Hojouru In the valley. Mr. Itohtk- received a ttatiafuctory price (or lit lieep. Mr, and Mm. (uy Seam au4 daughter, Ada, und Mr. and Mru I). A. Yates were tl Inner guest at the N. 1. Alley homo Sunday. Mr. and Mm. Wallace Smith enter tallied a party of (rleudH at dinner Kutidny. i Mnt. A. W. Hityn vlHltod licrdiuiuli tern In Prineville tiunday returning liomo Monday. Mr. 8teveiiB of Kedniontl, brother In-law to Frank KImhIit, In out here liclplng thu latter gentleman In the building of bU new house, ileud l crowing over Uedinond be cause ot the fact that Gov. Went, on liht recent visit, appeared lu the former towu In a boiled shirt while Millinery Always the Latest Styles at Mrs. Estes MILLINERY PARLORS Prineville, Ore. In the latter he wore a flannel shirt. We are mttlHlled In our own minds had (iov. Went paid Powell Butte a vIhU he would have come toKK"d out In a Prince Albert, Milk hut and patent leathern. In w hlcb enne both townn would buve hud our nym puthy. Iiiclemenry of the weather wnn re. npiinnllile for a very small attend unce of ineiiiliern at the Powell Ilutte tioroHln meeting bint week. The UtoetliiK wim with Mm. Mornc. I'M Plerntui bud a runaway butt week lu which be wan (ortunatu to encape uninjured an bin team, litlggy and hiirneiut looked the worm (or rough umiga afterward. Mm. (ieo. II. Hoe, mother of Mru. Wllcoxen, who bun Ixt'ii 111 In re ported iui Improving. Mennrn. Smith and JoIiiihoii, travellnif evniiKt'llntn, who have been roudiictlnir revival meetlnitn lit thu Wllnou M'hoolhoiiHe clonetl their met-tliiK Kuiulay evenlmj, leaving for Prluevlllu Monday. lieo. Hoblm In lu Itedmond thin week where be In putting lu blpare time Kortliitf npuiln. Henry Tweet had the mlntortune to bme flne blif mare iant week. Lamonta Items. Mr. und Mm. II. F. Mitchell epent Sunday at the Oiunr Cyrun hoaie. There was a lure crowd out to Sunday School butt Sunday. A crowd of tlie I.HHionla jtouiik lulu attended the Oliver dunce January 23. A very pleunant time wan reportexl. Pearl nud Neva Wel;iuiil HfK'iit a few day at the Mitchell home bint week. Vern Merctuint In home on a rlnlt. He bun bwii traveling tor the hint year. Mru. Ira Black In expected borne the butt of tide week from Wuaklng ton. Mlnnei Lena and Kthel Cox Hjieut a pleiutant day at the 1.. Tboeiun home Sunday. Chun. Puxtou ban returned home from a short tay with hln uncle dear Salem. Mru. Rngner aud oon, George, re turned home Friday after a Hliort vlnlt with Mrs. ilaguer'a daughtt uenr (lervnln, Oregon. Don't forget the big howket bocIiU at Lomonta, February G. Mr. L. II. Smith 1b hone from Prineville after a abort Rtny. For Sale ituff Orpington, raised on free range. pofoeMlng stamin, vigor, quality and healthy laying macbinea; the kind that wind the blue ribbnnn. r'ftt (or eetting of 15 Pen No. 1. $S: Mo. 2, 3; No. S $2: No. 4, $1.50. Alto mine Al eocka and hem for Bale. J. H. Gray, l-21l-8in Prineville, Ore. Dissolution of Partnership Notice is hereby given that the part nership heretofore existing between O. L. Huff and H. L. Maker, under the name of Hufl Makar Auto Co., ia din solved by mutual consent. 0. L. Huff will continue the butineia at the old location. 0. L. Hurr, H. L. Makkr. Dated January 22, 1914. Soenlo Upland Place. 8. C. White Leghorn pullets and yearlings, f 1 each. Bent blood winter layers. Hatching eggs, f 5 per 100. Address K. D. Tirrlll, Prineville, Ore. M5-4p Work Wanted. Any kind ot work, housework, hotel or restaurant, lly young woman. Inquire at John Morris' residence; 1-22 Cockerels for Sale A few thoroughbred Rhode Island Red cockerels for Bale at reasonable prices. 1 15 4tp Cakky f obtkr. Grimes Valley there will be Sunday School and church attbeOrlmen Chape Sunday, Feb. 1. Itev. ItuniMcy will preach. The Lower Ryegrnns Literary Society meet next Saturday even ing. The program committee In pre paring a program and all expect a plcunuot time. We have been having umnom! weather for January and eeverul of the farmer have taken advantage of It and are doing their spring plowing. There will be a bueket social and entertainment nt the (Jrlinea Chattel, Friday, February 6. at 7:30 p. m., given by the I-udleH' Aid and Modern Woodman Hand. They are getting up a good program. The leading nu m Iht In a play lu five arts and there will be other good numbers with good iiiumIc by the band. Thin In the butt sochil of thin kind that they expect to give thin winter. In fact, It will be the hint help they will ottk (or the Itenent ol their church, o they would be pleanetl II every one would come and bring banket. If you can't bring a banket come anyway. There will lie coffee and aundwltchcn (or thone that have no lunch. Come everyone. A Crttloal Cow. Tbe city trlrl boarding In the couutry spoke to the farmer about tbe savage way la which the cow regarded her. "Well," aald the farmer, "it must be on account of that red waist you're wearing." "Deer me," said tbe girl; "of course I know it's awfully out of fashion, bat I bnd oo idea a couutry cow would no tice If Ladles' llouie Journal . The Jtrs Drum. I dreamed I'm ewer dreaming titue That 1 teaO-ode old Feguua, And throucb Ot day and through the nlg-ht Aerdia th miles we took our flight Until at laet mjr wing born ateed Plunged downward, and we ataod upoa The earth beelde the fount. Indeed, Of HeUeonl And I wa happy, ot because I knew that by the poete' laws J. too. belonged te that bright bead Aad with the laureled throng might stand. Nay, I wae glad because I'd be Prepared to answer by and by That cheeuaut, "Did rou over Bee A hone fly V Cleveland Plala Dealer. . Cause For 8orrow. "What's the matter, Freddie? Ton appear cast down." . "Annette's father refused to accept me for s son-in-law." "Well, cheer up; there are ether girls." "It Isn't that I'm thinking what a chump I was. I let her father' ball 4og bite me eleven times." Exchange. 8ong For a Suffragette. When Phyllis pours the kerosene aloag the oaetle'e statre Hew soft and dainty la her mien, how rapt the look she wearel And, ah, what ohanta eould poets alng to spread abroad her praise If near they might be lingering when Phyllis sets the blase I But at? her mad and merry moods the one that I love beet Comes when tbe somber midnight broods above a world at rest. Below the quiet city sleepe. above the stare are calm; But, oh, the heart within me leaps when PhylUa hurls the bomb! New Tork Times, Ha Explains. "I hear you passed my wife on the street the other day and said she was not much for looks." "I can explain, old man. You see, my wife was along, and she, asked me If I didn't think your wife a perfect beauty. As a married man yourself, you know that was my cue to disa gree." Louisville Courier-Journal Stock for Sale Three brood bows with pigs, one male hog, two years old, Ave milch cows, nearly dry. Inquire at tbe old home place or write Mrs. E. F. McMeen, La monta, Ore., or Chas. McMeen. Me tolniB, Ore. 12 18 6t Dry Lake We are having fine weather. A soft nnow tell tbe pant week and we have about a foot of It ou the ground now. " Drylnke In now a money order of fice. The M, O. department wan put In Jan. 2 Mall le steadily In- creunlng. Crooked river people living near here are planning a postotllce uenr GIlchrlH; and propone getting sup plies) from'Drylttke. There will be a dance at Dry Lake January 30. English Department Crook County High The English department is in charge of Miss C. V. Conway, who for the past seven years has given untiring energy and unswerving loyalty to the service of Crcok County High School. Many stu dents have passed out from under her gentle regime with well learned lessons in booklore, public speaking, and last but not least, an under standing of the true moral worth that makes men and women strive for life's highest attainments. Miss Conway represents the best in the lessons she teaches and in all their after years, her students, working out their problems in life's school, will speak her name in gratitude for the work so faithfully done. The school has a strong four-year course in English, three of which are made requisite in order to grad uate. The first year's work con sists in the study of the fundamen tals of grammar, punctuation and the principles of rhetoric, developed through theme work, principally in narration and description, with special emphasis laid upon spelling. Attention is also given to oral ex pression. The classics studied dur ing the year are "Ivanhoe," Ery ant's translation of the "Illiad," Irving's "Sketch Book," Macaulay's "Lays of Ancient Rome," Shake speare's "Merchant of Venice," and Scott's "Lady of the Lake." The second year includes a thorough review of grammar, spell ing and punctuation and the princi ples of rhetoric developed through themes in narration, description, exposition and argumentation. The classics studied are Dickens' "Tales of Two Cities," Coleridges "Ancient Mariner," Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar" and Tennyson's "Idylls of the King." During the third year of the course the study of American liter ature is taken up and the classics correlated with the history of liter ature. Themes, chiefly in exposi tion and argumentation develop the reasoning powers and fluency of language at the same time. Study of verse structure is correlated with the study of the poets. The fourth year has a strong de veloping and summarizing course. The English classics are studied in connection with the history of Eng lish literature. Themes are written in exposition and argumentation and public speaking taught in con nection with these and the oratori cal composition. Seniors and juniors are required to write one oration during the year. In each year of the course the aim is to give thorough drill on fundamentals, fluency in oral ex pression and to inspire a love for the best in literature, developing the power of appreciation by gain ing intimate knowledge of the work $1000 FREE IF I FAIL TO CURE any CANCER or TUMOR POOR CURED AT HALF PRICE OR FREE NO KNIFE, OR PAIN NO PAY UNTIL CURED br SUARANTEE. No X Kar or other twindle WRITTEN GUARANTEE 3-day palnlen platter ANY TUMOR. LUM or SORE on thi IIP, FACE or body lonf ii CANCER. It New Pilnt Until last Stag. 120-PAGE BOOK acnt freei teitimoniala of THOUSANDS CURED 4S& Any Lump n Woman 9s Breast I BEUEVF K Al WAV CANCFB ami Al UflV datp iltndi In ttit armpit and KILLS QUICKLY I twaar w hava CURED 10,000. Ga laa unit ';i;OldDr.iMrs.CHAMLEyrBV "HOST lUCMSSmi DANCER SPECIALISTS IIVIM" A B 438 Valencia St, SAN FRANCISCO, CAU KINDLY MAIL this to somtont with CANCER and lives of the great masters who lived and wrote so well that all suc ceeding generations have owed them a debt of gratitude for the words that make life's hard places liveable. In all the work in English the students are encouraged to express their own opinions and to think for themselves. Oral composition is begun in the first year and con tinued throughout the course. The work in the two literary societies gives opportunity to apply the principles learned in the class room. Credit in English is given the par ticipants for their work in the inter- society declamatory and oratorical contests and in the inter-scholastic debate. The strong course in English here outlined is offered by Crook County High School to the young people of Crook county and the school earn estly hopes that all these young peo ple will take advantage of their op portunity. There are over a hun dred students taking this course at present. Listen! ye axe at the heed of the Parade with our Good Goods. You Can't Beat Our Low Prices! v Ve are going to keep at the head of the parade vlth our good merchandise. Ve long since determined to lead by never putting a poor piece of goods In our store, and by selling the best ob tainable In medium and high grade mer chandise at reasonable, just prices. tio one can ever lead us, because our methods can't be beat. We have made our lowest, last money saving reductions In prices, and our "good things" are going fast. Ralph L Jordan