Crook County journal. (Prineville, Or.) 189?-1921, March 30, 1916, Page PAGE 8, Image 8

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    CROOK COUNTY JOURNAL
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ANEW FAIR FREE -
FROM WOOL TO WEARER
.'lit. '
.sSfr
If CotM i feuni in lh Fu,
0'lH.S
S;00tf.lllS I
Tur
1 4 w A
Sheep s
with ,
v
PlDIGREE
XT
lot'" A
IS THOSOUCHLV A
SCOUKCB ANSSHRUNK
ttE v. ill
GIVE A NEW FAIR
rOM vast
K" I .?$4jl
ON8. ,
u ...
PANTS I'rhvj
f
rJitniiTTcrti.'Si
Merchants Scllinq our
Pants, arc Authorized to
Make Good this Guarantee
at our expense
MAYFIFID WOOLEN MILLS
HATFIELD, KT.
fOff SALE Br
ROSS R. ROBINSON
4 t
1.1! ;i
r
in tho work of cnuUeHtion. Many j one member of the county e urt!
other Important and really vital Jlet-d by that lunly boa member
oi una eoumy ai leuiuu in eouneii
problems fur the fanner ran be
solved only through organized
efforts of "communities or
bodies of farmers.
What community organization
i-i .. !...!-
can Hceompusn lor weir rum-
munities, so can a county organiza
tion accomplish on a larger scale.
As the organized community work
or whatever the dolomites may
I'lmitKit tn I'nll thi nritini'ut itin. Thi.1
county organization, which outline
all community organizations have
received by letter from me and
which several of them have already
approved. 1 would like very much
I to have each farmer's individual
t X'l . ' At
,s stronger ana more euecuvt. u.nopini(mi)f Uw mu, Ml
the worK ot mc luinvnunu, u i u;
work which a county oratfiiizution
may accomplish greater than that
which the community organization
can hope to undertake.
Crook county needs an organiza
tion of farmers and the farmers are
in much greater need of such an
organization than the county. The
problem of markets for exaniVk. is
one thai can be solved neither by
the individual nor by any local com
munity. 1 have a tentative plan for such an
organization for this county, which
plan was suggested at the county
agriculturists' conference at Cor
:.. t ..... .....i ,.f ,. v.;..i, I
'"-""""'' . j 2!). 1913, made homestead entry No.
should like to receive opinions from mm aml on November 14. 19U
very glad indeed to receive sug
gestions for improvements ami for
carrying the plan into effect.
NOTK'K l-'OU IUDk
Sealed bids will be received at
the otlice or the clerk of school dis
trict No. 1 until April 2.", for f0
cords of binly pine and 'Jo cords of
red juniper to be delivered during
the Summer and early Fall.
20t:tc. 1). II. Peoples Clerk.
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
Department of the Interior, U. S.
IjuhI Otlice at The Dalles, Oregon.
March 27, 19tti.
Notice is hereby given that
llerschel G. Hunn
of Roberts Oregon who, on March
OF
FAI
By A. E. Lovett, Agriculturist.
The organization of farm com
munities is now a proven success in
Crook county. Not only have the
older organized communities con
tinued their organized efforts to
ward the betterment of their re
spective neighborhoods and suc
ceeded almost beyond belief in the
t lings they have undertaken but
also both the older and the newer
organizations have accomplished
thit no amount of individual work
could have accomplished in eradicat
ing rabbits in the county; the total
number of these rodents reported
killed "by these organizations being
51,043 for very little over two
months' work and at a cost of less
than 700.00. Had the work of
eradicating this number of rabbits
been left to the individual and then
had the county pay a bounty of 5
cents per head for this number of
rabbits, very few more rabbits
would have been killed in the same
length of time and it would have
cost the taxpayers of the county
$2552.15 besides the necessary ex
pense of the men killing the rab
bits, or at least this same $700.00.
Also, the assistance of the U. S.
Biological Survey was made possible
because these community organiza
tions and this assistance has pro
moted both economy and efficiency
farmers and others in the county
This plan is as follows:
Each organized community elect
a delegate to represent them at a
central meeting in the county; each
community in the county having
the privelege of organizing and
electing such a delegate. These
delegates shall meet at some central
point in the county, usually the
county seat, to discuss their various
problems and a solution to same.
They shall elect a board of directors
or executive board from their num
ber, who shall have power to act
for them in all matters of interest
to the organization and who may
meet monthly or quarterly as de
cided by the delegates present at
the regular meeting The primary
object of the organization will be
the improvement of all agricultural
conditions, including marketing,
etc., and to assist in the direction
of the work of the county agricul
turist. I would suggest also, that
made additional homestead entry
No. 01109 1, for the SiSKJ, sec. 23
NWJ sec. 25, NINE1. section 26.
township IS south, range 17 east
V. M., has filed notice of intention
to make final three year proof, to
establish claim to the land above
described, before Lake M. Hochtell
U. S. Commissioner at IVineville,
Oregon, on the 4th day of May,
1916. Claimant names as witnesses
Granville H. Nye, Dora G. Newton
William Eldridge and May Nye, all
of Kobeita Oregon.
H. Frank Woodcock, Register.
20t5c.
OUR WORKS.
A certain inarticulate (eU con
icioutnct dwell dimly in im, which
only our work can rendrf articu
late and decuively discernible Our
work ate the minor wherein the
tpirit first sec its natural pigment;
hence, too, the folly oi that impos
sible precept, "Know thyself," til
it be translated into thi partially
possible one, "Know what thou
canst work out" Carlyle,
The McCormlck Binder Saves
Down and Tangled Grain
WHEN it cornea to cutting extremely short Rrrun,
or grain that is down, tangled, and lodged, ai
yours often is, tlio hinder must bavo an exceptionally rigM
reel wiih a wido mnyo of adjustment. ....
The red on ttio McCormick hinder cuu bo ailjuotml very clow to th
f iurJ, o tltut tlio owratircii force short Kinm. or ((rum tlmt in Mk" I
iukI UukIihI, ou to tlio pliilformcunvaa. '1 lirre is iir-vrranv acnmulu
turn of grain In front ot ttm cutter bur. No nmtmr how bmlly tlio grain
i down, tho McCormick binder picks it up ami bonis it all.
It is tlio uiiUvoculilo Krusou that trir tlio worth of a biuJcr. Tb
McCurunuk tuoUs tlta tuU. Coma ia uuU lot's UU it over,
W.F.KING. CO., Prineville, Oregon
urn
a
Attention Stockmen
The Oregon & Western Colonization Com
pany has most of the odd sections in five
townships in the vicinity of Sisters, Oregon,
on which they will receive bids for grazing purposes up
to April 10, 1916, in townships or as a whole. One
half of these lands are in the national forest and one
half outside. Maps showing
location will be furnished on D 17 TaLm
U. 1 JU1II15U11
Prineville, Or.
application. Company re
serves the right to reject any
and all bids.
TO
H0RS1
EEDERS -OF CR
COUNTY
W (C(PWx
A
Imported black stallion, registered in Percheron Society of America, No. 92336; French
registry, No. 93422. He is sired by ETUDIANT, the only stallion that ever defeated
CARNOT. The stud is six years old, weighs 1900 pounds, stands 17.2 hands. Imported
by Metz & Sons, Homewood, 111. He is their choice of all their young horses.
Will Stand This Season
At MONTGOMERY'S, April 3, 4, 17, 18; May 1, 2, 15, 16, 29, 30; June 12, 13, 26, 27.
At McCALUS, south side, April 5, 6, 19, 20; May 3, 4, 17, 18, 31; June 1, 14, 15, 28, 29.
At BUTLER'S, April 7, 8, 9, 10, 21, 22,23, 24; May 5, 6, 7, 8, 19, 20, 21, 22; June 2, 3, 4,5, 16,17,18,19,30.
At BARNES', April 1 1, 12, 25. 26; May 9, 10, 23, 24; June 6, 7, 20, 21.
At Prineville Stables, PRINEVILLLE, April 13, 14, 15, 27, 28, 29; May 11, 12, 13, 25, 26, 27; June 8, 9, 10,
22, 23, 24. . . 4 1
DOUGLAS LAWSON,
PRINEVILLE, OREGON