TOuLTRYn', NOTES BY C.M.DAKNITZ PA. o tORRESPOVDtVXE SOLICITED These articles and Illustrations must not be reprinted without special permission. J THE DORKINGS. If there was a dispute as to which cock crew thrice when Tetcr denied his Lord, the Game or the Dorking, we rather think the evidence would say the Dorking, for, though the Game is of great antiquity, the Dorking was in particular a Koman favorite, borne by them side by side with the Koman eagle and made the fowl of the land added to the empire by conquest A peculiarity of the Dorking is the fifth toe, and this peculiarity is one reason for their mention In ancient history by Pliny and Columella. The fowl's antiquity was attested by the excavations at Pompeii, de stroyed by earthquake T9 A. D. There a large mosaic was unearthed contain ing the perfect picture in stone of the 4 , . Photo by C. M. Barnltx. BILTKB GRAY DOBKtXO COCK BIRD. Dorking, showing that it was a fa vorite with those ancients. England is the modern home of the Dorking. - Caesar bore it there 53 B. C, when be conquered the ancient Britons, and, though they hated Caesar, they esteem ed the fowl and made it the national breed, naming It after Darklng, now Dorking, in Surrey. Ancient pictures and the mosaic from the ruins of Pompeii show the fifth toe and shape characteristics of the Dorking as they appear today. The varieties are the Colored, Silver Gray and White, the last with rose comb. All along down the centuries the Dorking has been prized us a meaty, Photo by C. M. Barhitx. BILVEB GUAT DOBKINO HEN. market fowl, and. well bred and well fed. It is bard to beat It is large, with a long, broad, low set body, full wide breast deep keel and is short legged, solid, compact It has white shanks and the white skin and pink flesh so popular with the English. It seems specially con structed for meat development and the production of big egs. The Silver Gray Is most popular, and the Colored Dorking is largest DON'TS. Don't be weary of the w ay. Remem ber the hosts who have passed on who thought not of themselves alone, but tried to make the path smoother and brighter for those to follow them. We pass this way but once, so let It be ivith good cheer and noble deeds. Don't forget t hat there is a golden mean in feeding. It's not the amount a hen eats, but what she digests and assimilates, that brings the profit Don't tackle poultry on a large scale until you have made it pay on a mod erate plant Don't expect bony, skinny stock to escape the detection of the city buyer. He will often class the whole ship ment by a few such poor birds. Don't ship live poultry in undersized crates. It Is cruel, poor business pol icy and unlawful. Don't use any kind of an old box for shipping dressed poultry nor old, stain ed, musty crates for eggs. They de tract from the appearance of the goods and put the shipper In the bughouse das W ...( .'V ' - y.f " r- ..I-' S -. ' , ' EASTER HATS CHEAP. Raster comes but once year, And many men are alsd. For. thou! it should be otherwise, Easter makes thorn sad. Because those Easter bats are hth. And women, don't you know. Must be in siylo-here, don't you smite! If hats are h gh or low. But Johnny Poo of our row Has ceased to be the goat It costs him not a stnitte red It wile wants hat or coat. And John has seven daughters too. Oh, fathers, think of that It each one took you by the par And hollered for a hat! John bought his wife some Leghorn henr And irave each girl some too, Well, now, you ought to see the tun! Oh, goodness, what adol Those women have an egg contest And egg money ahem! They do not need to ask for cash From "these tight ttsted men." John's women folks-my. how they dresst John has cash in the bank. And no one but the humble hen lias Johnny Doe to thank. Friend, when your wife cornea cooing round About that Easter bonnet Just throw your arm around her neck And read her this aweet sonnet Then give her some nice Leghorn hens. And hats will come like tun. Those hens will jump right on the neat. And, pop, they'll lay her one! C. M. BARNITZ. KURIOS FROM KORRESPON DENTS Q. What is wrong when cock't comb turns dark? A. It's a sign of indigestion, weak heart, diseased liver, sluggish circulation or frostbite. Q. I have a Leghorn cockerel with a lop comb. How can I make him carry it straight? A. If mlsshapd. thin at base or has deep finger marks, you can't change it This trouble la often the result of weakness from lack of nutritious food, the inroads of lice or loosening of comb through roup. In these cases removal of cause generally makes comb correct Q. If you were to start a goose farm, what variety would you choose? A. The White Embden. Q. What do you tblnk of moth balls for louse killer in winter? A. The laying hens aren't on the nest often enough to get any benefit from them and only touch them with the under body. The worst lice are on the neck and bead. Moth balls are apt to flavor the eggs. Q. What Is meant by a top cross of Rhode Island Red and White Leg horn? A. Mating a Rhode Island Red male and White Leghorn females. FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS. Twelve dozen chickens are killed and dressed every Saturday by the poultry class at the Kansas experiment sta tion. This certainly beats the lessons on "How to Dress Poultry by Mail" Issued by the correspondence school. Yes, practical work tells In every de partment of life. Many do not realize what a bard worker the hen is. From dawn to twilight she is on the go, and all for food to keep up ber body and manu facture ber product If a dairy cow does not get suitable and sufficient feed she does not produce quantity and quality In milk, and just so with the bard working hen she can't make something out of nothing. The latest convert to poultry culture Is Charles M. Schwab, the steel mag nate. He is building a concrete, steam heated, electrically lighted poultry plant on bis farm at Lorttto, pa. We remind him that It takes good strains, great pains, good grains and burnished brains, as well as boodle, to get there with cockadoodle. The Clmlx lectularius. commonly known as the bedbug, alias the crim son rambler, In slang the B flat Is branded a transmitter of tuberculosis and other contagious diseases, and hu mans afflicted with 'em should dispose of them quickly 'without a trial by Jury. The Dermanyssus galllnae. the red mite or bedbug of the hen tribe, as It crawls from ben to ben. also Is a carrier of microbes and often spreads a disease whose presence is hard to ex plain. The old story that the cackling of geese saved Rome is old evidence of their watchdog quality. A stranger, a strange dog or a bawk comes In sight and without fail the old gander and his whole crowd start to bonk. They have been known to sound the fire alarm and to sound the Alamo when chicken thieves appeared, and such rubberneck cops are good to have around. The farmer Is very careful that the bog, sheep or beef he sells is lu fine condition for market but be seldom prepares bis poultry for sale and often Just grabs the chickens off the roost at night and starts with then) for market the next day before daylight This slipshod way of doing business has led to the establishment of great fatten ing plants near Chicago, where the farmer's thin chickens are finished and sold at a big profit that goes Into the other fellow's pocket Mr. John J. Sweeney of 172 East Ninety-fourth street New York, bought a cold storage egg and wrote to a Miss Clara Baker of Bellefontalne, O.. whose name was on the egg. She had been married four years and recalled that six months before the wedding she bad packed the egg for shipment. This is rather an old egg. but there are others. While glass lets In the light and sun's heat it is also a rapid conductor of heat, and this Is why henhouses with big glass fronts get cold so quick nt nijrlit mid Jack frost covers the big windows with Ice. ) A Call For Recognition Are there any hero medals applied tor up to date? la there one to fit a man obscure and humble In his (me. Vet one who risks his life and does the very best he can To obviate the diiuger that beset his fel low man; Who faces Icy gulps and never flinches from the blast; Who saves men, women, children, think ing of himself the last? t'pon that simple cStlson some passing thought bestow Who puts ashes on the sidewalk after hoveling off the snow. Oh, kind philanthropist, while honoring those whose records claim A public's admiration and a monument of fame Contrive some decoration that will cause the family's eyes To look on dear old father as a hero and a prise! Think of the many mortals who, as they passed on in line. Were saved from fractured foreheads or concussion of the spine. In letters all unfading write It that the wortd may know, "He put ashea on the sidewalk after (hov eling off the snow." Washington Star, TELLS WHY IMMIGRANTS FAIL IN MENTAL TESTS. At Worst Upon Arrival, Saya Federal Surgeon Illiteracy Negligible, The difficulties confronting the men who examine Immigrants for the pur pose of discovering their precise mental qualities, and especially whether they are defectives, are discussed by Dr. E. K. Sprague, surgeon of the United Stales public health service, in the Survey. Where doubt exists the alien should receive the benefit of it be says. These Immigrants, says Dr. Sprngue, are packed into box cars and rushed to the port of embarkation, where they are either subjected to an examination of more or less rigor before boarding the steamer or crowded into detentlou pens to await the sailing. Once em barked, new horrors await them. They suffer all the torments of those unac customed to the sea. After ten days or a fortnight they arrive In port. where a trial, in many respects the climax, awaits them. While they are in a condition of half fright and half sickness, w ith nerves shaken and cour age at the lowest ebb, they must un dergo a thorough medical examination. Many of them have also to undergo a test to prove that they possess suffi cient intelligence to face the struggle for existence In their new environment Dr. Sprague observes that it would be well within bounds to say that many of these new immigrants are in a state of mental frenzy when tbey come up for examination and that the attitude of the Interpreter may be sib h as to excite or even frighten the sub ject, placing him in such a state that be Is far from able to do himself Jus tlce. "The examiner must discriminate,' warns Dr. Sprague. "It is necessary to differentiate between Ignorance, mental dullness or stupidity, psychic depression and congenital mental defi ciency. Is the depression temporary? Is the subject capable of mental de velopment, and will be avail himself of opportunities to that end? Such are the difficulties and questions arising daily." Concerning the question of Illiteracy. Dr. Sprague says: "Illiteracy Is almost always a negli gible consideration In this and in oth er countries where psychic research has been carried on. "Among Amerl cans If one cannot read or write and any Intelligent attempts have been made to acquire these elementary ac complishments the case is of easy so lution. Illiteracy runs very high among the Immigrants 35 to 40 per cent. The fact that they cannot read or write Is no criticism of their ability, but it renders tbem more difficult to handle." A THEATER FOR THE FARM. North Dakota College Plans Model For Homes, Schools and Churches. A new force for culture In rural com munltles has been Initiated by the North Dakota agricultural college in the "little country theater" enterprise, according to Dean W. T. Sumner, cler gyman and sociologist of Chicago. "The plan is original and I predict It will extend over the entire United States," be said. The idea, which was advanced by Professor Arvold. In charge of public speaking and debating at the college, calls for the establishing of a model theater In miniature, suitable for use In large farm houses, country school houses, village halls, churches and else where. The scenery is simple, readily and cheaply constructed by the Inex perienced from a set of rough plans. The Idea Is to have one act produc tions in order to make the expense small. Dean Snmner says the enterprise will be an Incentive to communities to or ganize consolidated rural schools and social centers In order to have larger and more convenient halls. Fossil of Pliocene Man? The first seeming proof thnt man lived In the pliocene nae, when the earth's surface began to assume Its present form, has come to view In the I,ft Urea (Oil.) clay licds, where Dr Krank S. Daggett, diic-tor of the Mu scum of History, Science and Art, hn men lit work uncovering prehistoric bones. The find is declared to be the skeleton of a man who lived on earth hundreds of thousands of years ago. "The Heart of Oregon', Continued (torn first page. region into such rugged hiirtnony lilaok Butte, the old landmark thnt guided the travul-wenry pioneers along their way. Today it la the Mecca of anglers, for t its base flows forth the clear, limpid waters of the Metolius river, the home of the finest trout in Oregon. The Deschutes Canyon is one of the scenic wonders of America. The river flows down this deep, nar row canyon, with its terraee-nealed walls, through a channel cut in a solid lava bed the greater part of its way to the Colu.nhia. The river haa many beautiful falls along its upper course. Cline Falls are the best known of these, Along opposite banks of this weird river, Hill and Harritnan have rival railroads that were built as trade arteries to Oregon's heart. Sestet Net te Be Fertettea. Ud the Ochoco valley near Look out Mountain is another of Crook county's wonders. This is Stein's Pillar, a great shaft of rock 160 feet in height, standing on a beauti ful mountain spur. We feel very near to glory-land when we watch the master painter pass his magic brush across the western 8ky, and in a few minutes give us a vast view of nature's art gallery. Such colorings Titian never saw, or if he saw them, never put them on his canvas. There arc rarest opal tints, changing gold and orange, elusive harmonies In violet and crimson, and, in the fore ground, reflecting back to the won derful lights from their crowns of snow, rise our guardian mountain peaks, pointing the way to eternity. Over all the great, splendid stretch of country falls the golden glow of sunset and we feel that here we know what it means to "walk the hills with God." Come Jto our beautiful Heart of Oregon and watch the sun go down. On Better Acquaintance. Td like to see the girls who writs The articles on siyle. For each must be a dazzling sprits With a bewitching smite. And those who tell us In a book Of recipes so fine Oh, how I wish that when they cook They'd ask us In to dine! I like the writers who put stress On admonitions wise. Who teach us all about success And bow to win the prize, rd like to meet the chap whose clear And resonant refrnln Announces earth Is full of cheer And no ore should complain. 8KQUKU The fashion girl Is plain of dress The cook eats ham and beans. The man who writes about success I.Ives much beyond his means. The optimist to whom spplaus Went out la all s bluff; He has a steady Kronen because He has to write the stuff. -Washington Star. To get results from the setting hen, exterminate the enemy. Lee's Lice Killer, Insect Powder, Carbolineum and Little's Dip. 3-19 O. C Claypool & Co."! Hplstein Bull for Sale. Thoroughbred Holsteln hull for siile. $100 on time mid f!)0 cash takes hi rn. T. F. Mivai.i.ihtkk. 4-2-lmp Fishing Tackle We hitve a complete line, Kvery thlnir .vou need. Come and see L. Kamstra, The I'rlnevllle Jewelry & (Sporting UooiIh btore. 4-a Oil Meal at Claypool's. Strayed Light hay horse, gelding, weight 11120,' rangy built, huld (ace, four white stockings, Sniiill brand on lelt shoulder, also T K connected on stllle. Has linker on and hIiiito shod No. 2 shoes. Liutt seen near Roberts, Ore. Hewanl of $12 will bo paid for recovery of horse. Deliver horse to M, 8. Alayflelrl. 4-V-linp Gasoline Engine Cheap 2i h.p. Fairbanks-Morse. For sale cheap for cash. Inquire at Journal Office. Horses for Sale Forty head of good work horses, 4 and 5 years old, for sale; weight Irom 1050 to 1300 pounds. Will be sold at right prices, (i. H. Russell, Frineville, Or. 3-5 Jersey Cows for Sale Anything from calves to milking cows. All young stock of high grade. Prices reasonable. 'Phone or i address, L, il, Liifollette, Prlnevllle, Oregon. ;i-5 Mrs. Wright's Confectionery Store Fresh home-made candles always In stock. Hoft drinks of alf kinds Ice cream. Agent for American Lady Tailoring Co. Prices lower than ever. ,') 2 Mrs. J. N. Wright, Prop. TO 8EAI To sea, to seal Tho calm la o'er. Tho wanton water leaps la sport And rattles down ths pebbly shore; The dolphin wheels, Uto sen rows snort. And unseen uieruiiild's pearly song Comes bubbling uu the wood among. Fling broad the sail; dip deep the oar, To sea, to sea! Tho calm Is o'er. To sea, lo sea! Our whltu wing ed bark Shall, billowing, cleavn Its wa tery way And with Its shadow, diHt and dark. Ilreak the caved Triton's ttxuro day, U!,e mountain eaglo soaring light O'er tiiitelopes on Alpine height Thu anchor heaves; ths ship swings free; Our sails swell full. To sea, to sea! Thomas I.nvell tlcddoea. STATE RIGHTS. 1 solemnly believe that our po litical syxt.Mii In, In Its purity, not only the best that ever was formed, but the best possible that can bo devised for us It is tho only one by which free states, so populous and wealthy and occupying so vast an extent of territory, can preserve their liberty. Thus thinking, 1 can not ho for a better Having m hope of a better. 1 am a con aerviitlvo, and because I am s conservative I am u state right limn 1 bcllcvo that In the rights of the states are to lie found the only effectual mean of checking the overactloti of this government, to resist Its tend-eie-y to concentrate all power here snd to prevent a departure from the constitution or, In rase of one, to restore the government to Its original simplicity and pu rity, -John C, C'alhoua THEOCRITUS. I 'cinder, rich lu fruit and rich In grain, may this corn be easy lo win and fruitful exceedingly. 8ee that the cut stubble faces the north wind or the west; 'tis thus the grain waxes richest They that thrash corn should shun the noonday sleep. At noon the chaff parts easiest from ths straw. As for tho reapers, lot them begin when the crested lark la waking and cease when ha sleeps, but take holiday In the beat Lads, the frog has a Jolly Ufa. Ho Is not cumbered about a but ter to his drink, for bo has llij uor by him unstinted. Iloll the lentils better, thou miserly steward. Take heed lest thou chop thy lingers when thoo art splitting cumin seed. Bongs of the Reapers. More (aenerous. When little Ronnie brought the milk In off the front porch ono cold morn ing be found a pillar of the frozen fluid sticking tip out of the neck of the bottle. "Oh, mamma," be cried, "1 like our new milkman." "Why?" asked the mother. Showing her the bottle, Ucnnle ex claimed: "Our old milkman bardly filled the bottle, but this one heaps It up." Youngstown Telegram. Closing Out! Our entire line of Sulky, Gang and Walking Plows, Disc, Spring Tooth and Peg Har rows, Garden Cultivators and Wagons. Get our prices. 0. G. Adams & Co. PRINEVILLE, ORE. i' t.. J -ITS JsTfiSJ WilliliiSI GREEN TRADING STAMPS Get your stamp Look full by May 1st. To the partv bringing the first filled stamp book after May 1st, we will present in addi tion to tho regular premium, goods to the art ount of $5.00. To the party bringing in the fifth book we will give in addi tion goods to the amount of $3.50, and to the party bringing the tenth book we will give a beautiful silk summer parasol. Books must be filled. Be sure and get your stamps. C W. ELKINS, Prineville, Ore. ANCER IN WOMAN'S BREAST ALWAYS BEGINS SMALL LUMP LIKE THIS and ALWAYS POISONS OOP SUNOS IN THE ARMPIT AND KILLS QUICKLY I WILL GIVE $1000 IF I FAIL TO CURE inj CANCER or TUMOR I TREAT BEFORE H Poisons Bone orOiip Bliadi HO KNIFE or PAIN It Pit Until Curstltj Me X Hay or other! slndl. An UUiid Slant mskssths rur IKRUti DUAKIIUf Anr tumo. luxe ftors im ths lip, (sea or body ln( is I 'unf HNmrPaMi until it slspi. 120 fI 00 vnt ami tMlathiuli .4 l)'.tmn-lii ni'ni ftl h-M waits TO MOM ANY LUMP IN WOMAN'S BREAST la CANCER. Ws Mum thounnits Dylno. Cam Is lata. Ws ban itinl Iu.imni la iv yrs. Address DR. & MRS. DR. CHAULEY & CO. A 433 TALEMCIA ST, SIR FRlXCtSCO. C1L KINDLY MAIL thu to tome om with CANCER If You Want Eggs Raise Anconas Settings for Sale from k Good Laying Strain See DALE JONES Prineville, Ore. 4-9-1 XUioe fur I'uMK-utlou. . Iicmrtiiii'iit t)f Mm Intrrltir, I'. S. Lund Ulllte nt Tlif Dallt a, Or. March 24th, 1UU. Notice Is hereby jtlveii tlmt Jennie limy tif I'rlnevllle, Ori-Kiiii, who, on Aim !Hi, 1!K, inutle ilesert litixl entry No. or.l.Vl, for n & HcJ, iiml n'u ' M.i tlun 18, township 16 soiilh, runue 111 eitHt, Willamette Meridian, hits llletl notice of Intention to make flnul tlfxert proof, to estulillHli elullll to the. lit ml ithove (lenerllx'il. before Timothy It. J. Puffy, V.8. Comml. nloner, at, 1'rlnevllle, Ureiroli, on tho 1st iltiy of May, 1U14. I'laliiuint nutm-H lis witnesses: Homer Norton, John II. Urity, both of I'rlnevllle, Oregon; William II. I 'out, Wnllnee Post, both of Post. Oreiron. II. Khan Woont'tx'ic, 3 26 Id-ulster. I P.