Image provided by: Crook County Historical Society/Bowman Museum; Prineville, OR
About Crook County journal. (Prineville, Or.) 189?-1921 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1920)
TIlllWDAV. NOVEMBER li.'inao CROOK COClfTT JOURXAt, Pag I Powell Butte News MIm Kay Buasett u spending ft week or more visiting in Corvallla. Urauduia Brown hui gnu u Van couver, where ilia will b with hr daughter! who II v tlit.ro. WhIW away eh will receive medical treal ' uiHiit. W hope Kim will com horn auuch Improved lu bealih. , Mrs. Berth Brown, lb lescher of Wilson school la having a house niovad tbla week from bur homo toad oo Eaal Powell Butt to ber bonis lu tha Irrigated diatrkt of tha Powell Bulla product. ''Mra. Mary V. Charlton spent aev-1 ral days lu Prlnevllle recently be cause of tba Illness of frland, Mr a. . Jap Ireland. She returned to hurl bom Monday. leaving tba sick lady j jouth Improved. , . I !' WnCPetereon hat been appointed, to Uka cbarga of tba affairs of lion-j ry llanaon, deceased. ' Mr. and Mra. J, Arthur Mllner, Ueorg C. Truosdale, E. Carl Cbart ton and Charle Charlton, Jr., at-j tended tba Arm lit lea Day celebration ' lu Prlnevllle from I'owall Butte. . Mra. E. H. Stawart and ber slster-In-law, Mra. Gladya Stout, loft on tba Sunday morning train tor Hood River, where after a short vUll with (Honda, Mra. Stout will go on to Seattle to vllt a frland for about month, aftor which aha wll return to bur bow lu Dakota. Mra. Stewart1 will remain to visit with frlanda In Hood River before reluming to tbla eoclKm. Mra. Stout baa spent tha summer with ber brother and bia funilly here at Powt-ll Butte, and has niBiio many friends who will ba (lad to ave her return soon. Mr. and Mr. John Cronln and children, Mr. Sue Wllooxen, MIm Margaret Dussett, Dominic Verges, and Dun llourlgan formed a Jolly picnic party on Armistice Day. They built a roaring big fire In the old riv er bad, and cooked dinner, aft-r which they sung songs and "spun yarns" until tha snow storm droro them boma. A. W. Bayne, Wllllnm Peterson, J. F. Prlca went to Bend Friday, re maining all day at to bedside of Henry Hansen. Mrs. Grace Bayne has been quite III, but wa are glad to report bor much Improved at preaent writing. Powell Butt Sorosls Club bas been divided Into thre groups, and three different entertainments will be given througb tba winter, each group being represented for on en tertainment. Group No, 1 mat at the borne of Mra. I verso n Monday af ternoon to prepare plana for lb first entertainment, that will ba put on aome time In December, The fol lowing named ladloa were present: Mesdumes A. N. Bayne. E. A. Bua sutt, Hans Jacobaon, E. L. Iversoa, E. H. Agee, Miss Mabel Allen and Mra. Carl Fischer. Mrs. Jap Ireland la recovering af ter being quit at ber bom In Prlne ville. Don H. People of Bend visited at the Bechtell horn In this city th first of lb week. Mrs. M. Thompson baa purcbaaed lb old Bell home on Eaat Third Street from V. a: Bell. , - ' . Mr. and Mra. Lake M. Bechtell and Mr. and Mra. Asa Battles attended tha funeral of Mra. D. H. Peoples In Bend lust Saturday, ' ' ' Mrs. Frank A. Turner (no Eva Street) of LaGrande, arrived Mon day night In Prlnevllle to be with ber mother, Mra. J. M. Street for an Indefinite visit. The marlage, which occured November 18th, waa a com plete surprise to her mother, as well as all her friends In Prlnevllle. Mr. Turner Is a machinist of LaGrande. Hood River on Friday. A party waa liven at O'Nell at the residence of Mr. and Mr. Earl For est last week, and a large crowd at tended and enjoyed the social time and dancing . C, Helms shipped thirty head of young cattle to Portland tbla week. Mr, Cox, who recently arrived from California, with bis wife 'and seven children, Is living here while look ing for a farm to rent. It Is report ed that be bas one Id view In the vi cinity of Prlnevllle. Mr. Vern Lanti has moved from the ranch of bla brotber-ln-law. Will Duckey, as the latter baa about com pleted the aale of bia ranch. Mr. Omar Cyrua bas moved frou bla ranch at Opal City to Terebonno. so bis children can attend school her. Mr. H. Oatea ablpped thirty fat geese to Portland Sunday morning. 6l AMERICAN LEGION VOTEfl THANK Now turn to the Classified Ada. Terrebonne rWH KEWS NOTES JT To tha O. A. R., ,the Spanish War Veterans, the American Red Croak, the Salvation Army Lassies, the fa culty and student of the Prlnevllle schools, the Baptist Ladles' Aid who gave the Legion dinner, the mer chants who contributed towards tha Legion dinner, all citizenry In t tendance, and all organizations ot individuals who contributed toward or assisted In making the recent ob servance of the Ind anniversary of Armistice Day a success, Crook County Post, No. 29, American Le gion, wishes to extend its sincere thanks. JOHN DOBRT, Acting Commander, M. W. 8KIPW0RTH, .Adjutant The Pototo Growers' Association shipped two carloads of seed pota toes to Toppenlsh, Wash., this week, and the Jupe at Lower Bridge ship ped a car to Stockton, Calif. Mrs. Lottie McFaddon came home from Yakima, Wash., this week, to remain this, winter with her father and brothers. All of the Terrebonne teachers at tended the Institute at Bond last week. ' Mr. Brown, who Is Interested In a ranch northeast of town, went to WE DO IT RIGHT Every housewife and cook knows that there is a right way and wrong way to do things, and so It Is with the compounding of medicine. If rightly done. It's O. K., If not the story may be a sad one. Experience Counts HOWARD DRUG CO. TURKEYS W. S. Ayres has tur keys for sale, fattened specially for the Thanksgiving market. Call Surburban 941, or pick out your own at the ranch, a mile and a half from Prlnevllle, on the low er Crooked River road. 10-ltp. LISTEN MEN- Woolens Have Taken a Tumble - 'V TTT AND IF you have been waiting to' order your V winter suit and overcoat, you ,can feel safe in -JJ placing your order now, as there has been a very decided drop in all high class woolens, and the ''prices I can quote you now are much lower than those 'of 30 days ago. If you are figuring on an outfit for the Holidays, get your order in early so as not to be disappointed. . J, A. GILLI3 THE TAILOR m BUICK T TTILITY is the dominating characteristic i of the new Nineteen Twenty One Bukk Valve-iiv-Head Series. . Buick engjneen have alwayi made service and Eower their leading priqapleg and thoe who a uy motor can on, this business basil will find in the hew Buick series high-powered trans ports just as strong, durable and dependable as the highest engineering skill can make them. While service and power are emphasized, the new Buick models are cars of striking beauty, highly attractive in lines and in appointments. In resilient spring suspension, making riding -smooth and easy, and in the generous room provided for the full number of passengers, they offer a high degree of comfort The roomy, commodious new Buick seven passenger open car is a happy selection, com bining comfort and utility with extra passenger , capacity to meet every neea. When Better Automobiles are Built, Buick Wilt Build Them HENRY W. HOWARD, Prineville, Oregon ABM1STICE-DAY DAVGHTKR 1 . BORN TO VETERAN'S WIFE , An armistice- day daughter, waa born In Portland Thursday to Mr. and Mrs. Max L. Boulanger of Lake Grov. The newcomer picked, an appro priate time for her arrival, for both her parents saw war aervice. Mr. Boulanger was with base hospital I No. 46 and Boulanger waa in the! 148th field artillery. She was Miss LouiBe 0. Summers prior to their ' marriage in January. Engaged be fore the war, Boulanger and hi fi ancee met m France through a whim of circumstance, although neither knew the other was within miles. Telegram. BE YOUR OWN CHIROPODIST He Easy . With a Griffon Angle Safety Con Parer Twenty-five cents, at HOWARD DRUG CO. - CXEAN YOUR RECORDS -dear-Ton) readily clean your ell Phonograph Records and makes them play like new, fifty cents, at HOWARD DRUG CO. I ;:BSk- i mm m IB M, kmrf- ill f ItoJffiiM 9118 n pill Records are Played- . ! r'JrW lilPsff 1 Com sad, ksar K! . No . 0f MwittMS I I troabl to dmooatrat. ' ; jPJ JyyX i ! I v-. 1 i i ifl mi i i m iiriiTj -.x , iiti i! n mm i m i i i; -m iBPE Hlli'liV "NlMiipiill ij 1 !: Mmlmim THOUGH you have no person in your home who plays or sings, you will not be denied the pleas ure of hearing the voices or instru ments you like best when you possess the Stradivara, for in it you acquire both the Instrument and the Artist You have before you any of the world's great players and singers. v ' Piano, violin, cello, flute, stringed orchestra, tenor, soprano, baritone voices or chorus, are produced by the Stradivara in all the sweet tone-naturalness of the original, r BtMdfom. if 3PhSS ' The Stradivara Sound Board is Essential to Tone . The thin eJge-grained spruce Sound Board extending the .;J. full width and depth of At cabinet has been found essential in : the production of mellow, fluey, musical tones.? It is a patented feature of the Stradivara. ' We earry a tall Itae et morde, aeedles, as4 ev ery tklag aBary for the PRINXmXI DBUO COMPANY