tSBM Colo: mlbia emi uea Die aee s In the Columbia Range, we believe we are offering one of the very best and most attractive ranges made. It's 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 X E. Lamonta Items. II, T. Mitchell mill family cpcut Sunday lit the J. M. KIiik Ikimii'. Ira Muck nml fuinlly inmle a vlmt . to tin' homo of Mr. Johimton l Me tolltm IttMt Sunday. Oinnr Cyrim nml family npeiit Hun ila.V In Culver ut ttit' Itnlpli Peck home, Kluier Icwln, MIhwh Ailiv Mlti'lii'll nml IaAh (leycr with vhdtltiir with tit Welirnnil young folk bint Hntur day nml Kuiiiliiy. Mtirle Ilnuleii wiciit Sunday with Neva Wi'ltfiind. Joe Wi-IkiiihI wan a I'rlmvllli' vltt llor liiMt week. Newton Melton ami family arc Iiiik)' moving to their ranch north of I.iin imlii. Our Siimlny Kehool In proKreimliiK nicely. Tim nt tendance In IncrcaHliiK each Kumluy. Mm. Grant ami children a ml brother, Mr. Strlnncr, neiit Smulay evening at thi Henry Mltvlii-ll homo. Carl CurtlH ami wife tjMut Sumlay with tht) Jami-M ThomiiH (aiully. Clara Short wan a vUltor ol Martha ThoiuaM liiMt week. liatiki-t hih'IiiI Foil. U, at the Johu KiimIi Mall. A liljr play will I K'ven at 8 o'clock Kliarp. Dance after ward. Liiiliin, lirlujt a banket to Nell. Horn January 31, to the wife of Harry Wlmloiu, a 10 pound lrl. Harohl Ruby upent Kumluy with liardner Black. Kvorylioily come to the HnrdttiiicH numk dunce at the Lauuiiita Hall, TVIininry IX Willi Stack nml wife upent Sun day at the Ki rr homo. Grace Kerr Im homo on a vlwlt. For Sale Huff Orpington, ruined on free range, iiimwikhIiik 111111111111, vigor, 1 1 1 a 1 i 1 y mid healthy laying machine: th kind tlml win the blue rililxum. r.ggn 'or actting of 15 I'rn No. 1. f) No. 2, $3; No. 3, $2: No. 4, tl.Iiu. AIho amne Al eocki Mini hena for anlu. J. 11. Okay, llilKlm I'rineville, (Ire. Dissolution of Partnership Notice la liereby given that the port' nernhip heretofore exiHting between () 1., Huff and II. L. Muker, iinilur the name of Huff Maker Auto Co., in din Hiilved by mutual i'oiihoiiU 0. I.. Huff will continue the biiBinem at the old locution. I). L, llcKr, 11. 1.. Maxkk. Puled January 22, 1014. Cook Stove for Sale One inediuni ir.ed good cook stove ; lined only short time. Call ut Journal nllice. MS Millinery Always the Latest Styles at Mrs. Estes ' MILLINERY PARLORS Prineville, Ore. STEWART & COMPANY Powell Butte H. I). Miiittari lout a nice Hoi Mil heifer lat week, the reitult of eating too many potato. Thin heifer wan one of a liunch of neven well bred HolMtelim which Mr. MuHtard liouiilit (ant year ami which to 1(11 her with nevoral fine cow owned by him are dcatlncd to become the dtarter of the future Muntaril dairy herd. The time tif meetliiK for the Sun- day ucliool at the Wlleon hcIiooI- hoiiMe him Imi'H cbanKed to 10:30 a. III. J. A. ItlxuM Hold a loiul of tlrctmed pork to the lloilmoml market Fri day. Price of buy ha taken a derided jump lit our section. Heretofore, the price Iiiih 1h-cu (S with an occiiMlotial 17 Heller. Now all are iihMiik $10 and Hume boldliitf off for f 12 til the Htiick. The price deeni!n lnrnely upon how badly the farmer want to Hell. January weather which permit of haillliiK tiotntoc a dlHtance of 10 or 12 mile ln't enjoyed by every Htate In the union. J. E. Stewart and J. W. Ciirlmm, two promluont IiiihIuoiim men of Prlnevllle, were In thl locality Sun day lookttim at Home land with a view of InvcdtliiK. C. C. Montgomery, Geo. Brnzee, Keevo Wilcoxeu and dirt Seltz are Powell Unite men who loaded out hog for the Portland market Mou tiny. (ioo. ilotibu 1 hnulliiK out to the Heilmonil market. Patron of Hchool dlHtrlct No. 90 are unaulmoii In their ttiaiik to the Central OroKon Irrljtarlun Co. for their donation of which will bo applied on the hcIiooI debt In curreil by the bulldliiK of the new hcIiooI llOUHO. Notice of I i mt 1 Settlement Notice Ih hereby xlven by the mi diTHlKiied, the ndmlnlNtrntor, with the will annexed of the otnt of Ida Wright, (liveitHOil, to all peron In tercHted In Hnld entale that he Iuib made and tiled with the clerk of the county court hi final aiTountliiK of h i udmliilrtt ration of ald etnteand that the court ha net. Monilav, the fith day of April, at 10 o'elock'ln the forenoon, at the county court room In Prlnevllle, Oregon, u the time and place for hearing and Mottling uld final accounting. At which nld time anil place nny ihtmou Inter oHtod In ald oHtate may apM'ur ami objit't to aiil rlnal iiccoiintlnij;. i Dated this 5th tiny of Feb., 1914. p M. P. 1'owKi.i., AdmliilHtrator with the will an nexed of the OMtate of Ida Wright, ileooiiHoil. Notice of Sheriff's Sale By virtue of an execution in foreclos ure duly iemied by the clerk of the circuit court of the county of Crook, Htnto of Oregon, dated the 13tli day of Januarv, 101 4, in a certain action in the circuit court for oaid county and state, wherein Matlie Klliott n plaintilT re covered jiulument atiaiiiHt Fred A. Mc Dowell ami Leon a McDowell, ilefendiintp, for the mini of one thousand forty-five and no 'limidrodtlia ilolliirt, and cot and disbursement taxed atone hundred twunty-novon and no hundredth dol lar, on the lt day of December, 1913. Notice in hereby given that I will on The 14th Dnjr of February, 1914, at the front door of the court bouse in Prineville, in said county, at 10:00 o'clock in the forenoon of said day; still at public auction to the highest bidder, for ensh, the following doHcribed prop erty, to-wit : The s.iiith half of the northwest quar ter and lots three and four of section four, in township thirteen south, of riingH thirteen east of Willamette me ridian, in Crook county, Oregon. Taken nml levied upon as the property of the said Fred A. McDowell and Leona McDowell or ag much thereof a may he necessaiy to satisfy the said judg ment in favor of Mattie Elliott against paid Fred A. McDowell and Lenna Mc Dowell with interest thereon, together with all cost and disbursements that have or may accrue. Fkank F.lkins, Sheriff. Dated at Prineville. Oregon, January 13, 1014. 1-15 By D. II. Peoples, Deputy. You Can Depend On Your Neighbors By HOLLAND. TO whom do you appeal for help In time of trouble or li kne? On whom would you depend If dread misfor tune laid It heavy baud on you? Vour neighbor? Ex actly. Man In a cregnrlou nnlinnl, and be naturally care for relatives, friends and ac quaintances rather than strangers. Boclal affairs de-IK-ud eutlrely on acqualnt-an'-eslitp. and business affairs are controlled to large extent by the same element It would lie better If business and friendship were still more closely linked. If you would depend on your neighbors In time of ad versity why not depend on them In prosperity? Isn't the man whose hand you would like to grasp the man to whom you ought to baud the dollar that you have to spend? Why send it away to a mail order bouse which would be Interested in ilea tli In your family merely because It offered a possible chance to sell you a tomb stone or a crape band for your hat? You know your neighbors are reliable, that they can be depended on, that they would come to your aid with sympathy or material help should the occasion arise. Then why not show that yon appreciate their good quali ties by doing business with them regularly and as a mat ter of habit? They know you and are Interested In you. The mall order man Is mere ly Interested In getting your money, and that In advance. SPEND VOUB MONEY WHERE YOD MAKE IT. Or. Johnson's Hatrod of Americans. Old I'r. Samuel Johnson If he dis liked Scotsmen hated Americans. "1 am willing to love all mankind except an American," he said. And Miss Seward, the "Swan of Lichfield," who was present on the occasion, had the temerity to say, "Sir, this Is an Instance that we are always most violent against those we have Injured." "He was Irritated still more by this delicate and keen reproach," writes Boswell, "and roared out another tremendous volley, which one might fancy could be heard across the Atlautlc." Benighted. On a certain southern golf course the sand pits are famous for their diffi culty. A New York man played Into one of the pits and then cursed, none the less malevolently, If silently, while lie took six ineffectual strokes, raising only clouds of and and fairly burying the bull. Presently he was aware of an Interested and Incredulous durky watching him. "Whar you see dat snake you's tryln' to kill, man?" he demanded New York Post. DO YOU CROW STRONG? Great occasions do not make he roes or cowards. They simply un veil ihem to the eyes of men. Silently and imperceptibly, as we wake or sleep, we grow and wax strong, we grow and wax weak, and at last some crisis shows us what we have become. Canon Westcott Estray Strayed into my place, one bay horee with stripe in face; brand not clear. Owner identify property, pay advertis ing and feed and receive horse. 1 29-Ot L. W. Hum, Powell Butte . GLEAN MILK FROM THE SMALL DAIRIES Sanitary milk supplies may be fur lilxhed by the small dallies as well as by the larger ones by keeping the milk "cli-an. cool and covered." according to Professor It it Graves, bend of the Oregon Agricultural college dairy de partment Cleaner milk rather than richer milk Is the demand of the pub lic. And It is a demand that must be nn-t by the dairyman with a small farm dairy If the market for bis prod u-t 1 to continue. The treatment nec essary In observing the three part rule 1 neither troublesome nor exiienslve. notwithstanding the fact that trouble and expense are urged as reasons against the production of sanitary milk. The quality of the milk may be easily improved without materially In creasing the cost of production. Itac'terla, dirt and foul odors are the Usual causes of Insanitary milk. The largest number of bacteria found In milk fall Into It during the milking. They come from the dust In the air and from particles of dirt, balr tnd immure. This u umber can be dt The rugged Drown Swiss cattle unlit recently were subjected to severe criticism from dairy cattle breeders In this country by reason of their departure from established dairy type. They first came hers In ruKBiil, not to say rough, form, and with hides that usually lack ed much of mellowness. But when one of the breed made above three pounds of butter day In a public test dairymen began to change their attitude, and today the Brown Swiss cow Is highly regarded as a milk and butter producer. The cow shown produced In one year 10,959 pounds of milk and 405 pounds of butter fat creased by keeping the cow well clean ed uud by wiping the udder and fluuks wltb a moist cloth Just, previous to milking No dry feed should bo given the dairy cow until after milking, and if the tloors are quite dry they should be spiiukled down lightly. Neither should roots or strong vegetables be fed before milking. The personal habits of the milkers must be closely looked after. Absolute cleanliness of clothes aud person Is indispensable to the milker of sanitary milk If the clean white suits i1od hi i $1000 FREE IF I FAIL TO CURE any CANCER cr TUMOR POOR CURED AT HALF PRICE OR FREE KQ KNIFE, OR PAIN 1,0 PAY UNTIL CURED tw GUARANTEE. No 1 liny or other swindle WRITTEN GUARANTEE- 3-dny piinlen planter Art T TUMUrl, LUrvtr- ' or SORE on the LIP, FACE 1 iViiT vV It Movnr P:tins Until Last Stage. 120-PAGE BOOK i tnt tree: teatimomula 1 of THOUSANDS CURFO lis ny Lump Woman's Ereast I BELIFVE IS ALWAYS CANCER, and ALWAYS polsor deep iluids In the etmnlt end KILLS QUICKLY I swear we luve CURED 1 0,000. Go see tome '"iOldDr.&Mrs.CHAMLEYrc1 "MOST SUCCESSFUL CANCER SPECIALISTS LIVING" A B 436 Valencia St., SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, KINDLY MAIL this to someone with CANCER Scenic Upland Place. S. V. White Leghorn pullets and yearlings, $ 1 each. Dour blood winter layers. Hatching eKRf, $5 per 100. Address E. I).- Tirrill, Prineville, Ore. M5-4p Work Wanted. . Any kind of work, housework, hotel or rentHiirnnt. Ily yomiK woman. Inquire at John MorrlH' residence. 1-22 T3i luinuiercini uuirie are not available their plnre may be well supplied by a long, light, loose fitting coat, which Is worn during milking and at no other time. The pwtlcp some milkers fol low of moistening the ndders wltb milk Is too filthy to be tolerated In any dairy If the teat and udders have been wled a suggested they will not need further moisture. As warm milk rapidly absorbs all odors present, it should be removed from the milking stable Immediately after being drawn. It may be cooled by pouring It Into cans that are sitting in tubs or tanks partly filled with water a cold as can be bad. If pos sible It should be reduced to 50 degrees or lower, in which case bacterial activ ity almost ceases. The cooling process Is hastened by occasionally stirring both the water and the milk wltb a clean rod.. and It should be completed at least before the end of an hour. Another source of bacteria In milk Is Improperly cleaned milk vessels. All pails and cans In which milk is kept should be washed in warm water with a bit of soda or other detergent and then immersed for five minutes In bolling'Vater. Special attention should be given to corners, where decayed milk containing souring and putrefy ing bacteria Is found. Watch the Lambs. Sheep more than any other domestic animals require variety in food, says the Farm and Fireside. In the fields they are able to cater for tlmmsoivoa Buy Cheaper Now! Dressing veil Is necessary for success. It also pays In the comfortable, well dressed feeling It makes you have. . There Is no argument about this. Ator will there be any argument In your mind about where to buy things to wear If you ever once buy anything from us. You will find the quality to be good, the style to be proper and the price to be low. Our prices are now the lowest of the year. We are making our Clean-up, "Aoney-Saving" Sale of Aacklnaw Coats, Rubbers, and Felt Hats and Caps, Flannel shirts, Pants, Gloves, &ults and Overcoats. Prineville Merc. Co J J Gtzzm f l 2. :, ?. ? rrxr.i'j M1 x - out in tne yard they are dependent on their keeper, and it ts up to him. if bt hopes to make the best possible profit out of tbem. to see that this desire for variety 1 as far as possible gratified. After lambing Is over a much wider rnnge of feeding Is admissible, and. In fact, there is hardly anything in the range of grains, men Is. succulence and roughage which may not safely be giv en to ewes with their lambs so long as they seem to enjoy and fairly clean up what is given them. "Watch the laiMia" is the best rule to follow. It they show signs of falling off the source of the trouble is almost sure to be found In something in the feeding or care of the ewes that needs a change. Impure water, foul uir, rotten lair, dirty feeding troughs, want of salt, exposure to benvy rains, rough treatment of any kind any of these evils if continued will greatly help to lessen the hoped for profits. Clean the Barnyard. Piles of manure and manure puddle are in very bad form around the dairy barn and look had for the owner, says the Farm Journal. Manure Is too val uable to be allowed to He In heaps or spread around the yard. It should be spread on the laud daily, or be put un der shelter. From a sanitary stand point It should be removed from the buildings. There was a time when a farmyard stench was regarded as healthful, but In our day we have learned better There is now abso lutely no pTenup for a filthy hogpen. Listen! It is your duty to dress yourself veil