COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER FOR CROOK COUNTY Crook CoMinity J.omraaS CITY OFFICIAL PAPER FOR CITY OF PRINEVILLE VOL. XIX PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1915. NO. 23 MAYOR ORDERS CLEAN-UP WEEK The City Will Provide Teams To Haul Rubbiih Away Everybody Should Help Mayor Edward Hat Divided the City Into DistrictsPaste Thii in Your Hat BAPTISTS' MEETINGS Rev. and Mrs. Driver, the well known evangelists and gospel sing er who uro in charge of the chupol car "Good Will" ure speaking and singing to vtyil congergations at the Baptist i (lurch this week, Those jM'ople came to Prineville to attend the Deschutes Baptist association, and were engaged for some nix-rial evangelistic services. These meetings occur each evening at eight o'clock. Special music is a feature of the meetings. Everyone is invited to attend. Use Electricity Suc cessfully For Cooking f Pursuant to an order of the city council, the period from May 4 to May 11 next is hereby designated mmi-iiii wi. Power company on electric ranges AM property owners. and tenant durinjr tho ,)ttst two ww.8 have are requested to clean up all rcluse ho(.n( M lhe 8))ow IiW)l,c wouj my Plans Being Made For a Great Fair MARKET QUOTATIONS The Crook County Fair, which is to be held at Prineville this fall, will be the biggest and best event of its kind in the history of this country. The board of directors, which held a meeting Saturday at the McCall ranch west of town, has decided upon a number of important im provements and changes that will combine to put the fair on a better and broader basis than it has ever been. The matter of a secretary, on whom tho heavy work of all The cooking demonstrations which fairg fai8) has been arranged on a have been given by tho Deschutes, basis that separates the business of from their premises and on the streets adjacent, placing it conveni ently so that it may be hauled away by the city teams. The city authori ties will have the refuse thus dc-po.-ited in the streets hauled off, but bropcrty owners and tenants will be required to pay fr charing the alleys. The city teams will operate in the various parts of Prineville as follows Thursday May 4, all of Main street and one block of intersections on either side. Wednesday May 5, all of First street and intersections to &eond. Thursday, May 6, Noble's addition and ull of Second and inter sections to Third. Friday, May 7, Third street frmn old Crooked River bed eiet to city limits, and that sec tion lying between Third street and the Ochoco. Saturday, May 8, a)l that section north of the Ochoco and played to packed houses. The demonstrations covered every phase of the science from the finest of pastry to bread baking, anil all of the work was done on electric ranges which convinced the ladies present that this is a quick and clean way to cook at least. No longer need the ta.sk of prepar ing the meals be looked uon as a burden. Quite the contrary. In the board and the managment of the fair, and will result in a great convenience and improvement in the managment of both. The new board are: H. McCall, president, E. T. Slayton, vice pres ident; and J. B. Shipp, secretary treasurer. Mr. Shipp will act as secretary for the poard and will have active management of the en tire business of the fair. R. H. Schee, has been chosen ex position manager, and upon him will fall the work of getting out thing in the nature of entries in the pavilion, in the livestock department and in racing will be entirely free. This has been the cause of con siderable friction in times past, and the new board has decided to follow the lead of some of the other most successful fairs in the state this year and make the entries all free. There will be a material reduction in the purses for racing, and a por portionate increase in the amount of premiums for livestock and other exhibits. The total purses for all track events will probably be not more than $500, and much attention will be given to feature sports of different kinds. In other words, racing will be a side issue instead of the principal event as has been at some of the fairs in the past. The livestock show will be the best in some features that has ever taken place on the Pacific coast. Thomas W. Lawson who is spending the spring and in the morning, prepare the diner, put the exhibit and arranging the it in an electric range, set the clock j details of the show. Mr. Schee is a attachment at the hour you want to young man of marked ability in the line of expositions, and his success in the past in work of this kind in sures the management something worth whiic in the way of exhibits u-rs the tirouer we.-1 oi main sreei. mommy, may ; r,.,u.)ei Qth 10, all that section north of the Ochoco and ea.st of Main street. AM property owners and tenants are requested to have their premises cleared of the refuse ready on the serve it piping hot, then take your husband out fishing or motor to the mountains. When you return, dinner is all ready for you to se rve. There are three types of ranges ; an( amiiM-ments offered by the local company. One He wi'd assume his Bctivc duties has attachments whereby the cur- jn H,i,t two weeks, and will remain rent is automatically turned off j Jn the field working on the matter hen Portland. Wheat Club, $!25; bluestem $1.30; red Russian, (1.20; forty-fold, $1.28; red fife, $1.22. Hay Eastern Oregon timothy, $15; grain hay, $12; alfaifa, $13.50; ralley timothy, $12.60. Butter Creamery, 25c. Eggs Ranch, 18c. Wool Eastern Oregon, 25c. Mohair 32 33c. SHEEP SHOT ON FRIDAY THE 23D Seattle. Wheat Bluestem, $1.34; club $1.28; red Russian, $1.23; forty-fold, $1.29; fife, $1.28. Barley $25 per ton. Hay Timothy, $16 per ton; alfalfa, $14 per ton. Butter Creamery, 25c. Eggs 18c. Baptists Hold Very Successful Meetings; Isadore Meyera' Band Raided and Many Killed Raiders Were Masked Thirty Sheep Shot and Camp u Burned in Broad Daylight Arrests May Follow The fourth annual session of the Deschutes Baptist Associaton met with the First Baptist church in this city April 22 to 24. There were in attendance twenty three delegates besides the local membership, some of the visiting fact a great part j delegates being people of consider- of his time on his ranch on lower able prominence. Crooked river, will bring the best j Special features of the meetings collection of swine that there is on j were the addresses given by the the coast if not in the United States general workers of the denomination There are hogs in this herd that cost Mr. Lawson from $500 to $1000 each, the item of express Miss Ruby Weyburn, field secretary of the W. F. M. S. for the northwest district and Miss Harriett Cooper, alone on some of the individuals district field secretary of the W. H. amounting to as much as $150. jM. S., entertained and inspired They embrace practically all of the 1 those present with the accounts of standard breeds, and several strains j the work of their respective socie- teinperature ih have other ad- been of the city as above j ,H, kl.pt quitc m(tl street on the days set for hauling in the sections de.-ignated. Should the teams overlook anyone it is requested that the Marshal be! not i lied and he will see that the oversight is corrected. C'has. S. Fidwards, Mayor. Find An Ancient Burying Ground Three human skeletons were dis covered in the field belonging to C. J, Johnson about a half mile south west of the city limits on Friday afternoon. In plowing for an irrigation ditch accross a sandy knowl a short distance south of the west residence on the Johnson ranch, some bones were discovered which upon investigation proved to be parts of humnn skeletons. A search was made and parts of at least three skeletons were found practically in the same spot, and not more than a foot below the surface of tho earth. Two of the skulls were complete, and many of the bones were in a good state of prcs' crvation. Dr. Belknap examined them and pronounced the skeletons to be those of Indians, and said that all indications point to the fact that they had been, buried there for many years. vantages. Twelve of these ranges have sold during I local users. j ladies because of the fact that the of exhibits, among the farmers and stockmen, practically all the time until after the fair is over. One of the big features of the the past two weeks to j fair this year is a complete change They appeal to the . in t)e mutter of entries. Every- of the same breed. Bessides these there will be large exhibits of first class ftock from the Henry McCall ranch, the Douglas Lawson ranch on upper Crooked river, the Dixon & McDowell ranch and of course a great many others. The premium list has been revised and put up to date. It will be issued and distributed soon. room where one is being used can Karl Lenz Dead. Karl Lenz,' who has been employ ed about the Hotel Prineville for Home time past, died suddenly last Thursday night at 9 o'clock. He had not been sick, but died almost instantly, apparently from heart fai lure. Rev. Luke Sheehan will hold services in Prineville next Sunday May 2, at 11 o'clock. Horse Market Is Much Improved Crook County horses, which have ieen a slow sale for the past several years, which fact has caused the ranges to become crowded with them, are in greater demand just at present than any of the other kinds of livestock. James Rice and J. R. Wilson who have a contract for 5000 head to be delivered to the government of France, have information that indi cates that their contract will bo in- reased to 10,000 head. These horses will be bought in Oregon, many of them east of the Cascades. Buying for these men is progressing rapidly now in the Will amette valley, and will start in this country early next month, when the range stuff gets in a little better condition. These men figure that they will have to look at some 25,000 head of horses before they can secure the desired number. Charles Holland of Kansas City will be in Prineville tomorrow and will buy horses, mares and mules of the artillery type. It is said that Mr. Holland has a contract for 25000 head but this report h,as not been verified. That there is a good strong demand for every surplus horse in this part of he country, . there is no question. Election Costs Crook County $5,600 It cost Oregon over a quarter of a million dollars to hold the clect inos in 1914. It cost Crook conunty $5,025 and Wheeler which got off the lightest paid out $1,412.08 in the same election with Multnomah paying out $72,415.99 at the same time. The figures were compiled by Secretary of State Olcott, and given out yesterday. Artesian Well on Thos. Lawson Ranch Artesian water was struck at a depth of 370 feet on Thomas W. Lawson 's ranch west of town last night by Wagoner & Company. The flow is not a strong one yet, the water raising to the top of the ground only. Another well will be drilled for Mr. Lawson on the same ranch in a short time. Uncle Sam to Help Kill Coyotes The United States government will send a force of men to Oregon to eradicate the coyotes according to an announcmcnt carried in the Portland papers this morning. The information comes through the offiee of the State Health Officer, Calvan S. White. The work will be carried on by the Department of Agriculture Mired in the Mud. Two motor trucks and a load of hay were mired in the mud at one time in. the lane near the fair grounds Tuesday evening. Irrigat ing in the adjoining fields has made I the roads very soft at that point. Property Changes Hands A deal was closed this week whereby Frank B. Foster becomes the owner of the M. L. Brown ranch near Paulina, and Mr. Brown gets tho Foster place on John Day. The Paulina property includes some 600 acres of land with which are includ ed about 200 head of cattle and other stock and machinery. While the consideration in the deal is not made public it is said to be a little less than $20,000. Mrs. Rose Howard is quite sick at tho home of C. F. Smith in this city.' Crook County High in Per Capita Income The census bureau at Washington has just given out some interesting figures arrived at by the last census. The per capita cost- of government is higher in Klamath county than any other eountyjn the state, being $22.77. Crook was below the ever age, being $15.22. Multnomah was $8.76 which was the lowest in the state excepting Hood River which was $7.56. Tillamook county had the highest per capita revenue receipts with Crook second in the state. The former received $38.93, while the receipts in Crook were $21.58. Crook received less money from a general property tax than any other county in the state, the total being $32,798. ties. Rev. Thomas Moody, missionary to Africa had the facts of the African field at his command. He made the t need of the vast continent a living reality. Much has been done for Arfica he says and much more remains for the Christian world to do Rev. O. C. Wright, general mis sionary for the Oregon Baptist state convention presented the need of the state misssions and showed the relation of the state work to the world wide missionary enterprise. Rev. W. C. Driver, missionary in charge of the chapel cr, "Good Will" was heard with intrest in re gard to the work of the American Baptist Publication society. Rev. W. N. Ferris of The Dalles gave an excellent sermon on the work and need of the holy spirit in the life of man. Rev. E. G. Judd of Bend preached the doctrinal sermon, emphasizing the distinctive principals of the Baptists. The body was pleased with several pieces of music besides the eongergational singing. The next meeting of the associa tion will be held with the Baptist church of Bend. Four masked men rode into the band of sheep belonging to Isadore B. Meyer on his range near Paulina last Friday afternoon about four o'clock and firing into the band killed some thirty head of the sheep The men went to the camp first and after taking the clothing that belonged to the herder, and pack ing it a safe distance from the tent, set fire to and burned the camp. Although the herder does not , know just how many shots were fired, he estimates the number at about 100. The sheep had been sold and will be delivered in a short time to the buyer at Bend. The contract price, which is $4 per head, in addition to the fleece brings the value of the sheep up to about $6 per head. They were brought onto this range last fall and wintered in a feed lot on the Meyer ranch. Mr. Meyer says that he can see no excuse for this kind of treatment of his property. ! as he has been a resident of that vicinity for over thirty years, owns 520 acres of land and was camped on his own land at the time of the trouble. He had about 1750 head of sheep, what he considers would eat the grass he is justly entitled to. Lawson Has Some Fine Percheron Horses Commissioner Bend today. Blanchard is in Good Crops Everywhere, J. T. Hardy of the U. T. was in Prineville yesterday. Mr, Hardy says that he has been over a large part of Central Oregon during the last few days and that the crops are looking fine in all has visited. He there is at least Good Records Made by Track Meet Winners The Inter-society track meet which was held yesterday afternoon on the high school campus between the Alphas and the Ochoconians brought out some good records by the boys. The Alphas were victorius, the score standing 61 to 37. Eleven of the events out of fourteen filled. Winners of the events were; 100 yard dash, Brosius. 220 yard dash, Farnsworth. 440 yard dash, Mc Callister. 880 yard dash Farnsworth 1 mile, Broderick. Running high jump, McCallister. Pole vault, Farnsworth. Kunning broad jump Farnsworth. Shot put, Hodges Javelin, Prose. Dicus, Estes. Douglas Lawson took two of his Percheron stallions through Prine ville Saturday to his horse ranch which the Lawsons recently pur chased from C. W. Colby. They are a pair or the prettiest animals that ever came to this part of the country. One of them weighs 2100 and the other 2160. One is a little over 17 hands in height and the other is 18 hands. These animals, together with Lawson's Mammoth Jack, King Boy, are standing for the season at the Upper Crooked River ranch. Such animals as these are what Crook county needs to bring the standard of the stock up to the place where it belongs. F. S. Hoffman has built a foot- the localities he bridge across Crooked river at his estimates that ranch. The bridge is made from 15 per cent more, heavy woven wire, stretched tight acreage planted to wheat this year on either side, 'with a board at the than usual. I'bottom for the bridge proper. ' Reduction In Light Rates Announced The Deschutes Power company announce a reduction in practically all rates to take effect on May 1. The reduction in rate3 for lights and electricity for cooking amounts to about 20 per cent, which reduc tion applies to lighting for the busi ness district as well. A very low rate has been decided upon for show window and sign lighting which will no doubt encourage the use of more of this kind of lights. Reductions are to be made in the irrigation rates also at this time. The Christian Endeavor society will hold a consecration meeting at the Presbyterian church next Sun day at 7 P. M. The subject is "Joys of a Christian Life." Plans for the summer will meeting. be discussed at this