J Crook Gouety Journal. I'RINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, MAY 11, 1!)05. NO. 22 VOL IX. 1 MICHEL & CO. frc You GoIikj to the FAIR? If you arc, very likely ymi will need cither a Trunk or a Suit Gase We have them in a number of styles and sizes and prices to suit TRUNKS SUITCASI'S CLUB HAGS TLLLSCOPKS $.nO to $10.00 $3.00 to $5.00 $1.00 to $ 1.50 $ .50 to $1.50 Hcforc HtiyiiiK Come and Look These Over i ft iviicnei ot company ivinjiit:i tx, vuiiih"' PUPILS GRADUATE NEXT TUESDAY Thirty-one Students of the Eighth Grade Will Re ceive Their Diplomas in Athletic Hall.. lummonc 3ln the (Court of Appeals for Supreme GOOD 1-NOUGU, Plaintiff, vs Till: HI-ST, Defendant, for MncvUlc ARGUMENT FOR Till- I)L FLNSI now hk.ioki: tiii: jtuy You rue familur with the argument (?) of the plaintiff, GGOD ENOUGH. How often have von hk'i1 "My clothes are ;o.n enough." "My appearance i .i.f r 11011.71." the enemy of the l!rt." We nsk yon to support -the cunxe of the Defendant. Io yon want to wear tir rf clothe, iiiiike tin' best appearance? . . ... . . i til .. 1 1 Siinoose Hoineone said votir reputation wan -coon cnoun ouu mkiii: It in therefore to your utmost interests to wear our tailoring, Tho Bst." We don't ask a verdict until after a "trial" order. f von want our best argument, give If you desire further "argument" of the rase, rail on us. uh a trial; a verdict in our favor will follow. See our lino of wmdens for made to order suits at -ind up, hacked up with a written Guarantee for one year. Do you a close fitting collar? Do you want that smooth, concave, hroad shoulder effect? Do you want coat fronts that will postivcly retain shajic? Twenty-live year in the business have equipped u with the tailoring knowledge we place at your service. Money hack if you're not satisfied. FRL1) K A HIT MAN, the American Tailor, Chicago Represented Hy B. GORMLEY A Complete Line of Hats, Suits ready to wear at $10 and up pr0f0SSi0nal Cards. glacksmilhing. That Pleases U The Kind Vou Get at J. II. WIGLE'S (Successor to) CORMKTT & KLKIXS'S A Stock of Farm Machinery always on hand A, H. LIPPMAN 8 CO. LINCF.NSED UNDERTAKERS and Manufacturers of all Kinds of FURNITURE S?. Ciiiott, jHorneg-at-jCau IPrineuiHe, Oregon, jtHemey-at-jCam !Prineuille, Oregon, Dr. A. A. BURRIS MAGXETie OSTEOPATH I Siii'wsiftilly tri'Ht dtxmwra without tlio use of Oruiss or Surgery by MKiii tie Osteopathy lhi New Scioure ot Drugloss Healing V () N 3 (' I. T A T 1 0 N F R K K Ottlee at Prlnevllle Hotel PRINEVII.LE, OREGON Commencement excrcis'.K will he held in Athletic hall next Tuesday evening, May 10, at which time 31 Indents of the eighth fade will receive their diplomas. A pro gram of entertaining exercises has Iteen arranged and the event promises to he the most important and interesting in educational circles this year. The program will hi gin at X o'clock ami is as follows: Musin Band Keeitation The Boy Convict's Story Vkh.va Howard Oration National Progress ClIRIfTlSA (ilkSON Instrumental Duet Minstrel's Ser- r ad Nora a.! Ioha Ste.vrxr Recitation Brier Rose Cki.ia Xfi.ms Oration National Iestiny.. Ai.kti;. Dii.r.oN Vocal Solo Meditation Ckoi.e Smith Selection The Last Battle Kdoar Barses Class Address Rev. J. Anthony Mitchell Presentation of Diplomas M. E. Brink Music 'lass Song The graduating exe cises are ojH-n to the puhlic and the school hoard and faculty extend a cor dial invitation to everyone to at tend. Class Roll Lora Stearns, Nora Steams, Blanche Stone, Ceole Smith, Edgar Barnes, Pearl McFarland, Warren Lister, Mild red Baldwin, Elva Dohhs, Aultie Snyder, Beulah Hyde, Ruby Cadle, Aletha Dillon, Lena Jones, Dolly Hodges, llandolph Ketchum, Margarette Foster, Horace Belk nap, Frank Lafollett, Celia Nelms, Nora Dohhs, Gertrude Hodges, Vida Jones, Effa Dohhs, David Pickett, Verna Howard, John Camphell, Lloyd Cantrill, Omer Hardin. Eutertainment Thursday Evening. Next Thursday evening the puhlic school entertainment will be hold in Athletic hall. The evening will he one of solid amuse ment and aside from dialogues, music and recitations two one-act farces will he given. The program lias been arranged mainly to ex cite the humorous sule of the audience and will furnish no little amount of laughter. The casts of characters are as follows: John Smith A Farce Old Smith J. A. Stctne Young Smith ..Wm. Boegli Tom Firkin A. B. Roller Tihhetts. .'. Bruce Gray Bov Horace Belknap Lydia Pearl Vanderpool Marv Jane Belle Rannels Landladv Maude Klrder Truth A Farce Mrs. Worldly Mrs. Belknap Ruth, her daughter Maude Kidder Henry Twaddles Wm. Draper Godfrey Trimmer John Luckey Bridget Mas. C. I. Winnek Truth ... .A charae'er which shines bv its absence. A nominal admission of 25 cents will he charged for the entertain ment Thursday evening to defray the expenses. hihition of the national sport. The Scarlet Tariagers put down three crosses in the first inning and went on better in the fourth which a few scattered hits coupled with fielders' errors hoisted the Prinevilleites a notch higher in the atrnwphere. The same inning brought one man home for the locals and three more went down on the score book the next inning. After the close of the fifth both teams settled down to better play ing, but the trip through the air in the first half kept the home team from overcoming the lead. Even in the seventh with the bases full and only one out, with a life time opportunity to make the finish interesting, a fluke fly to first and an easy grounderto short put the kibosh on the gateway to better things. Both teams used the big stick to do credit to the president, but the Benders kept the advantage. The score by inning3 follows: 123456789 Bend 300420100 10 P'vle 000130021 7 Bases on balls-off Bailey 1. Struck out-by Bilyeu 8; by Bailey 10. Time of game-2 hours. Umpire-Clothier. DRUNKEN INDIAN KILLS POLICEMAN Quarrel Between Two Red skins at Madras Last Monday Results in a Brutal Murder. STATE WILL TRY TO RECOVER SCHOOL LANDS Chaa. T. Cdwarts Jf. !P. S2ikna County SPAjfsician'S 32 c I knap 6c dwards Physicians and Surgeons. 00 &irr 2or Silt f Wn,t JDrtjy Storm Prinevilie. Oregon. J THIRD GAME GOES TO BEND Jt. Ziosenbartj ZPhystcian and Surgeon Calls answered premtlty day or m'yAt &rfsr Son. Jfttfi'AMM rvrmmr , it mull 9aiM Strti. i i i c i, : i. tun A Dlincil oi errors, wiuun ywv iuu Prineville ball tossers up in the air to such a height that the fifth inning closed before they came hack to the earth, gave the Bend aggregation its third game last Sunday by a score of 10 to 7. The game throughout was the raggedest which has been played thi3 season, neither the locals nor the visitors doing more than fill ing in nine Innings of a poor ex- Some important results are ex pected from the meeting of the state land board next Tuesday. If the recommendations of the Marion county grand jury are heeded, immediate steps will be taken to recover some portions of the vast acreage of school lands of which the state has been robbed, says the Journal. According to the grand jury s report, at least half a million ncreu iold bat Milt undfdctl by the state, were secured through fraud on the part of the purchas ers. This land can be recovered. and it is the opinion of Governor Chamberlain that the money paid by the purchasers -can be retained by the state and declared forfeited. But it is in the rower of the and board to go still further. In cases wnere me purcnase was tainted with fraud, and where deeds have been given by the state, suit may be instituted to set aside the sale, provided the title lias not passed to some in nocent third party. The speculation it school lands has been conducted on an immense scale, and the fraud? have wen glaring. Many men have grown rich bv these operations. Owing to the protection afforded by the statute of limitations most of the land thieves are beyond the danger of criminal prosecution, but there is still opportunity in many cases for the state to recover the land of which it was robbed. Through the activity of S'tate Land Agent Oswald West evidence has been accumulated which -shows con clusively the fraudulent character of many of these transactions in school lands, so that there can be no difficulty in maintaining suits to set aside the deeds. Undoubtedly strong pressure will be exerted to prevent the state board from attempting the re coverv of the lands. Political in fiuence will be invoked in behalf of the land robbers, as it has been in the past. But Governor Cham berlain is uncompromisingly in i favor of taking decisive steps for the recovery of as much as possi ble of the stolen lands, and it is expected that the other members of the board, the secretary of state and the state treasurer will coin cide in this policy. An immense amount of school land was fraudlently secured by the notorious Benson-Hyde ring, and forgery and perjury were free ly employed to consummate the frauds. Most of these sales can be set aside. In the opinion of those familiar with the facts probably three fourths of all the school lands sold were secured by such methods. The cancellation of even a small portion of these sales will result in adding large sums to the state school fund. John Stakony, chief of police at the Warm Springs Reservation, was brutally murdered Monday afternoon near Madras by a drunk en Indian named Corbett Holt. Stakony was knocked from his horse by a demij.,hn in the hands of his assailant. The latter then took off the hat of the prostrate Indian, placed a large rock inside of it, and with this improvised weapon beat Makony s head un til the skull was crushed into a shapeless mass and imbedded in the hard ground to a depth of several inches. After committing the deed, Holt . i itr swam nm horse to trie v arm Springs side of the river and was not seen again until the day fol lowing. By that time word of the mutder bad reached the Agency and Holt was arrested as soon as it became known that he had re turned. He was taken before Justice Brooks who held him with out bail and then brought to this city in charge of John Palmehn and the constable from Kutcher preciect. The trouble which resulted in one of the most brutal murders in the annals of Crook county, began Monday afternoon when Holt, who had secured a gallon of whis key, became intoxicated. He en gaged in several altercations with some of the ranchmen of the vicin ity who were around Madras and Stakonv mJcavorcd to get- - the other Indian away and directed towards his home. Holt became enraged at the ef forts of the Indian chief of police and when the latter rode away Holt followed him out of town About one mile north-west Madras the murder took place, It was at this point that Stakony was overtaken and the first blow struck with the demijohn, the shattered fragments of which were found strewn about the spot by Madras residents who first discov ered the mutilated body of the In dian policeman. Here, too, they found the rock inside the hat . . .. i it. i -j vrnose Dauerea ana Diooa coverea sides showed plainly the terrific force with which it had been hurl ed again and again against Stako ny's head. When the latter's body was removed it was with dif ficulty that the shapeless mass which once formed a head was ex tricated from the hole in the hard soil of the road into which it had been driven. Stakony was a well to do Indian and owned an extensive ranch on the reservation where he was at the head of the police force. He was also a full pledged citizen of the United States. Holt is said to be an Indian with a naturally ugly disposition which does not improve under the influence of whiskey. He was engaged in hauling lumber for some ot the new buildings going up in Madras when he gained possession of a demijohn of firewater last Monday and it was while under the in fluence of the liquor that his savage nature manifested itself. tinued. 1113 Chas. Durham vs Joh O'Kelly et al. Civil action. Ver- ict for Plaintiff for $771.65. Motion for new trial granted. 1122 C. E. Lytle vs A.M. Draka. Suit for commission. Dismioaad on 1 laintin g motion' - 1123 Wm. Baldwin and Isaat Troth vs J. A. Elliott et al. Cml action. Strciken from docket. 1 120 Bidwell Cram vi J. A. Garrett. Suit for water right. Referred for testimony. . 1129 Mary E. Browning Tt Ralph G, Browning. Divorce. Decree granted. 1129 J. D. Merrill vs O. M. Cornett. Action for damages. Judgment for Plaintiff $1541.66. 1130 Esther E. Farnsworth r Jas. B. Farnsworth. Divorce. Decree granted. 1132 Deschutes Irrigation A ' Power Co. vs Ferdinand O. Ker- und. Suit for right of way. Verdict for defendent $10. 1134 Fred II. Ladd vs T. J. Malloy & Co. Civil suit on ac count. Continued. 1135 A. D. Kennedy vs Bessi Kennedy. Divorce. Decree grant ed. j 1136 Irvine & Hamilton et al vs Mrs. M. J. Wood et al. Ciril suit. Continued. 1137 Albert N. Johnson , vs Crook countv. Recovery of taxes. Demurrer filed. Plaintiff given 30 days to further plead. , 1139 Motion to set aside find ings of court denied. t 1088 Hamm Brewing Co. ts August Peterson. Action on ac count. Confirmation of sale al lowed. 1138 Chas Altschul vs W. T. Casey. Mandate from Suprem court. Judgement on mandate. J. F. Morris vs C. M. Willey. Appeal. Verdict for defendant. J. F. Morris vs J. B. Tillotaoa. appeal nm pauoty. fiourti Con tinued. 1139 W. T. Casey vs Henry Turner. Appeal from justics court. Judgment for defendent. 1133 Decree as per stipulation on file. Dora A. Lyons vs Spencer H. Lyons. Application for alimony. Judgment as prayed for. FATAL SHOOTING AT PRAIRIE CITY CIRCUIT COURT COMPLETES WORR 1001 George W. Barnes vs Al len Henry, confirmation of sale Allowed. 1002 E. G. Bolter vs J. II. Gar rett. Mandate from Supreme court. Plaintiff and defendant to file briefs and arguments. Case submitted to Judge Bradshaw. 1070 Otto Uggla vs A. C. Palm er. Recovery of money. Con tinued. 1071 Christina Ericson vs A C. Palmer. Recovery of money. Continued. 1110 Augusta M. Jolly " vs Joseph Q. Jolly. Divorce. Con- As soon as the telephone office was open last Saturday morning, word was received from Prairie City that Ernest Hickman, who was bartender at the saloon of L. W. Woods, was shot by City . Marshal W. H. Lucy and almost instantly killed, dying within twenty minutes after the shot was fired. Not until Sunday were any of the particulars of the affair known, since it seemed impossible to obtain any information other than the bare fact that Hickman was shot and that City Marshal Lucy did the shooting. The affair took place in the saloon of L. W, Woods about 2 o'clock a. tn. Satur day morning, and it is said to have been the result of a controversy or trouble between Mr. Hickman and the city marshal. After the shoot ing Hickman ran to the home of Dr. V. C. Belknap, some 200 yards distant, but weakened from the loss of blood, he fell exhausted at the gate. He was at once carried across the street to his own borne, where in less than twenty minutes he died. The bullet that caused his death penetrated his right breast, and is supposed to have severed a large blood vessel, caus ing the wounded man to bleed to death. A coroner's jury was empaneled Saturday morning by Justice J. W. Mack, and after inquiring into the affair, returned a verdict that the deceased came to his death . from a gunshot wound inflicted by W. H. Lucy, but did not . say whether the shooting was justified or not. The remains were brought to John Day Tuesday where funeral services were held at the M.' E. church by Rev. E. Hayes, follow ing which the body was interred in the Canyon City cemetery. On May 21, 1902, the deceased was married to Miss Edith Woods, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. W. V00d3, then residents of John Day, and to their union was born one child. Canyon City Eagla. !PrineviUe, Oregon.