Crook County journal. (Prineville, Or.) 189?-1921, April 29, 1909, Image 1

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    (J
St' -
Crook
Couety
Journal
COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER, $1.50 YEAR
PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1909.
VOL, XIII-NO.20
ODD FELLOWS
ANNIVERSARY
Celebrated by Local
Lodge and Rebekabs
PROGRAM AND BIG BANQUET
Ninetieth Anniversary of Found
ing of Order Occasion of
an Enjoyable Function.
The DO tit nunlvenmry of the found
ing of the Independent Order of Odd
Follow tin coin and gone and u
general celebration of thin day wan
olrwrved by the ninn.r lodge of thin
great and popular orgnnlitatlon.
(H-hoco lodge No. 4(1, not to tie,
outdone, prepared a literary pro
gram nud banquet, and threw open
wide the door of It hull to the
Inter ItelM-kntiM, the Patriarch Mili
tant and many Invited guest.
Promptly at the hour of K o'clock
the innater of ren-iiioiihK, Hro. M. It.
Bigg, delivered the mldremi of wel
come in a happy vein, mid iih tv
aponded to by Klwter Wlliln lU'lkunp,
Noble Urnnd of the Itcbeknu lodge,
III A neat and well delivered ihivIi.
The D. I). U. M., T. II. LaFollette
then gave 11 hrlef history of the order
which wa llatened to with much at
tention. Aftfr thin address the fol
lowing program wun rendered, each
iiiiiiiImt lielng received with well
merited applnuMx;
Itecltotlon, Mr. V. L. Hlmttuek.
Vocal nolo, Mr. John Luckey.
I'lntio duett, Mlitm'M Crook aud
tCN.
lleeltntlon, Mr. ('. M. fthnttuck.
Trombone olo, Mr. Krncnt
Murphy.
Vocnl olo, Mr. Itnndolph Ketch inn.
Dialogue, Mr. Hnrnu Thomson
and Mr. Dinwiddle.
After the program the main event
of the evening took place, the table
lielng iiprend and coven luld for 150
perMOIIN.
The following responded to the
toimtN nmOgned them In a happy
aud humoroiiH vein:
itro. M. H. lllgg. Ulster J. L.
Murphy, Slater Jesuit V. Hartly,
Hro. Warren Drown, Hro. C. 1). Din
widdle, Ilro. J nine Allen and liro.
Karl McLaughlin.
Many Invited guetiU were prevent
and thin one occmdoit will go down
Into hlHtory aa one of the noclnl
eveuU In Odd 1'ellowdom.
. Tciitn, wngon cover and wngou
bow at J. K. Ktewart & Co.'.
Morse Wanted.
(ientle middle lmre, (food walker,
miiKt not lie more than nevcn year;
weight 1100 or bolter. Hpot riudi.
A. H. Iiiki.a.nii,
3-25-4 1 Prineville. Oregon.
Now is
These are the right kind
"PITS LIKE YOUR
FOOT PRINT"
I nnii r
i i i i ii il i
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L:.-' ti.
FOR MEN WOMEN
ASK YOUR
This is the
Prineville, Oregon
CIRCUIT COURT
MEETS NEXT WEEK
Long List of Cases on
' the Docket
WILL BEHELD IN NEW BUILDING
Term Promises to an Interesting
One with AH Manner of
Case on Hand.
The May term of the circuit court
will be held In the new court bouse,
preparation to that eiil are now
being made. The new building will
be ready to turn over to the county
on May 1st, according to contract.
All of the wiring and Installing of
light linn been completed. The build
Ing Will be Illuminated throughout
thU evening to tet the light.
There will be ninny caw of Inter
est to t'rook county people up for a
hearing at the May term of the cir
cuit court. There will le divorce,
damage milt for Blunder, damage
nulls for ninllclou prosecution, the
city of I'rlnevllle ha a ult on It
hand a a result of the filing of the
the time
1 "J
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U Ati
jc'i V. I
AND CHILDREN
DEALER
place f to buy I
VI KM M
referendum petition on the "near
Ihit" ordinance, t'rook county I
up niraliiKt an Injunction on the
propoMltlon of furn lulling the new
court limine, brought by. A. II. Llpp
man A Co., and there I no telling
what there will lie In a criminal way
until the grand Jury uuIhIicm It
work.
The following I part of the docket:
Jamc II. Kcott v. A.C. Knlghten;
darniigc for slander In mini of f-VJOO.
U. W. liarne. attorney for plaintiff.
J. I. I'aliucr v. J. N. Qullx-rg;
f.076 damage for malli-tou iterse
cutlon In bringing plaintiff and wife
before grand jury on a charge of as
sault with u dangerou weapon.
W. I". Myer, attorney for plaintiff,
W. A. Hell for defendant.
II. I. Belknap, J. W. Horignn, If.
D. Ktlll, (iardner Terry and Hay V.
Constable v. city of 1'Hnevllle: ult
to enjoin city from holding referen
dum election on "near beer" ordi
nance. W. A. Sell, attorney for
plaintiff.
Mnllnda A. IlohlnMon vs J. W.
HobliiHon; divorce and custody of
Itlta HobliiHon, aged 12 year. (J. L.
Bonder, attorney for plaintiff. .
Joseph J). Uarnard t. M. A. Bar
nard; divorce. M. It. Bigg, attor
ney for plaintiff. -
The following l the Jury Hut for
the May term:
C W Allen, Laidlaw A O Anderoon.Madrt
Cha Hoyd, llcnd Win Uuegli, llaystk
8 P Iyoriiift. Madras (i W Com h, I aidlaw
C K Parrih,Canip rk A M I-OKan, Paulina
Til Ufollette. Prill 8 Went, Redmond
P N Viblcrt,Young II F Smith, Git
E Roberta, Hbtrra T J Btewurt, Punt
T Keuter, Madraa V Swanson, Aaliwood
T W Bpear, McKay U W Rodman.Iiayntk
JO I'ow? ll.Johnson 0 V8 Kullerton.Kistera
C W I'ulinchn, H K fordaii, KistPM
W K Handel. Uidlaw A V Warrrn llaycrk
CW Kliret, Uniniond Upo , Willow ck
J I. Kve', llend J N Hunter, liend
W O l.itliirow, K.umwalt, Redmond
Ed iU-mtt, buniniitt
JUNIOR DRAMA
MAKES A HIT
High School Class Puts
on Good Play
SURPRISED PRINEVILLE PEOPLE
Gave the Best Entertainment of
of the Year Cleaned Up
High School Ground.
The Junior claw of the Crook
County High School Bunirlned n all
with the excellence of their enter
tainment hint Friday evening and
furthermore they put on the bet
little drama that ha been preented
to the I'rlnevllle public in many a
day. It seemed that every character
In the play wa exactly milted to the
one who performed It, the Htage set
ting were admirably rorked out,
and everything moved with a certain
poxltlvene that made the whole
performance enjoyable. .
The Btory of the play waa of one
Ephralm MoeUer, who owned a
runcu on the outskirts of Denver
and suddenly made a heap of money
by the disposal of the property In
town lots. He had a wife and a
daughter, and after hi accession to
prosperity he conceived the ambition
of making a match in high society
for his daughter. Trot J. F. Blanch
ard was this father In the play, his
wife was Miss Louise Summers nnd
the daughter was Miss Emerlene
Young. Meanwhile the daughter
had formed an attachment for a
young miner, Dallas Aldrieh, repre
sented by Wllford Belknap and was
engaged to marry him. Aldrieh had
not much to offer In the way of
worldly good or family, and the
father opposed the marriage after he
became wealthy.
The family went east and tried to
break into high society and match
the daughter to some bon-tou.
There they met a family named Ken-
drlcks, father and daughter, which
parts were taken by Roy Lowther
and Miss Agnes Elliott. The futher
was sorely a (11 lc ted with nervous
ness, and the daughter was an up-to-date
club woman, who had no
use for men. She had a suiter, Her
bert Singler, the part being taken by
Clark Morse. In this family there
wus a servant, Jane, this character
being taken by Miss Ethel Moore,
"hexactly". Herbert Singier was
pressing his suit for the hand of
Marlon Kendricks, and .on the ar
rival of the Mosher family, discover
ed that the Denver heiress still loved
Dallas Aldrieh, who turned out to
be his cousin, nnd one of the first
families, having gone West on ac
count of a misunderstanding with
his parents. Singier worked the
Jealousy game on his sweetheart by
paying devoted attention to Miss
Mosher and In the meantime sent for
his cousin In the west,
Dallas Aldrieh had struck it rich in
the "Blooming Daisy" and of course
when the father found out that Al
drich was rich and of the test family
in tne country, ne lounu no excise
for opposing his daughter's mar
riage and everything turned out
lovely.
Betweeu the acts Randolph
Ketchum'snng a solo, Miss Lelia
Garfield gave a reading and Miss Con
way, sang a solo.
: Morgan's orchestra furnished
music, and the house was well filled
with an audience that enjoyed
every moment of the performance!
The piece was put on under the
direction of Miss Rose B. Tarrott, of
the high school, assisted by A. B.
Roller, and everyone who had a
hand In the presentation of the play
is to be congratulated ou the success
of it. The receipts for
were about $00.
the evening
The Journal has been requested to
express a vote of thanks from the
Junior class aud the high school, to
the Prineville band and to Morgan's
orchestra for their gratuitous ser
vices. Friday was "Junior Day" at the
high school. During the morning
hours the school grounds were
cleared and leveled and cleaned up as
neat as a pin. In the afternoou'the
boys had athletic sports and the
girls played tenuis and served re
freshments to all the pupils. The
black and-gold flag, of the class of
1910 floated from the masthead all
day ou the high school building.
New P. O. at Powell Buite.
Powell Butte postofliee received
Its first sack of mail from the Prine
ville office Monday. It will be sup
plied dally from this place. All sub
scribers of the Journal who will be
served liy the new postonice are re
quested to notify us aud the Journal
will be sent direct to Powell Butte.
Baseball Season Is
on in Full Blast
The baseball seacon oned op last
Sunday when Redmond beat the Prine
ville team at the future railroad center
by a acore of 7 to 2. The came U laid
to have been a good one nntil the home
team made wild . throw that let the
Redmondite make a number of ran.
A number of spectator accompanied
the home team to Redmond, and all
unite in praiaing the hospitality of that
town. The following waa the line-OD:
Redmond Pcallloo Prlnertlle
J Tel he row e FctHlnkla
Dryden Re-ynoldp Bert Baroea
B. Irnmelee., lat b Cecil Steam
Ted B-cker U b Horace Belknap
R. Mucauley 3d b Edcar Barne
Ijiwaon j a Wllford Belknap
Roy Covert 1 f Pete Barnea
Claude Macaoley e t Dan Ketcbum
John Ed ward rf. Elmer Mitchell
Nest Sunday afternoon the ''Married
Men" will tske a whirl at the Prineville
Club on the home grounds. Redmond
play a team from Bend at Redmond
next Sunday.
One week from next Sunday the Red
mond team will come to Prineville for a
return game.
The prospects are that there will be
some good game in Prineville during
the May race meeting, a purse of $100
being bung np by the association. Red
mond, Bend and probably Lamonta and
Madras will have teams here for the
tournament.
W. F.King Has
Forwarding House
W. F. King spent a portion of last
week at Shaniko looking after business
in connection with his forwarding house
at that place. Mr. King ha had this
branch in operation for over a year al
though the fact has not been generally
known for the reason that he has not
handled much freight outsiJe of his
own. Being nnable to get a satisfactory
service at Shaniko, Mr. King secured a
warehouse there and put a man and
team at work. During the past year
this plan has cost him a little more than
the forwarding of his wares through the
public freight houses did, but be has
had the catisfaction of serving hia trade
without the annoyance of costly errors
being made in forwarding mismatched
parts to machines and implements.
While Mr. King does not intend to
make a business on a large ecale of for
warding for merchants, he would be
glad to handle any small shipment for
his customers, if they desire him to do
so. Any goods shipped to Shaniko in
care of W. F. King will be promptly
handled, and Mr. King' favorably
known business methods will doubtless
be a sufficient guarantee to bring him
all of this kind of business that he
wants. Small shippers will find that
they can get a much more prompt for
warding service in this way.
Farmers Granted
Trackage at Shaniko
At a meeting held in Shaniko last
week Mr. Campbell, representing the
O. R. A N. Company, granted trackage
to representative armers from the Mad
ras and Bakeoven sections, with the
end in view of assisting the farmers in
shipping their wheat crops after the
coming harvest.
The farmer present were delegates
sent by the Farmers' Co-operative as
sociations from Madras and Bakeoven
Last year the farmers hauling grain to
Shaniko did not receive satisfactory
commodation, many hauling to Kent, a
station several miles north of Shaniko
on the Columbia Southern, and by so
doing were able to save thousands of
dollars.
The plan now nnder consideration in
cludes the operation of a warehouse by
the farmers associations at Shaniko,
and another meeting is to be held be
tween their representatives and repre
sentatives of the railroad company to
make final arrangements on May 15.
Horigan & Still lost 1500 pounds of
hum and bacon Monday evening.
They were curing It In John Morris'
smokehouse when the building took
fire in some way.
VfMKlNtrPoi
jpi
ill
SUIT TO ANNUL
REFERENDUM
Taxpayers Want Peti
tion Set Aside.
DON'T WANT SPECIAL ELECTION
Claim That "Near Beer" Refer.
endum Waa Not Brought in
in Legal Form.
II. P. Belknap, J. W. Horigan, Gard
ner Perry, J. D. Still and Ray V. Con
stable are named a the plaintiff in a
suit filled in the circuit court by their
attorney, W. A. Bell, against the City of
Prineville, praying for a decree of the
court restraining the Citr of Prineville
from referring the "near beer" ordi
nance to a city election to be held on
December 15 next, and asking that the
referendum petition filed by Attorney
George Bernier, on behalf of the pe
titioners, be declared null and without
effect.
The complaint seta forth that on
March 30th, 1909, one George Bernier
presented to one C. L. Shattnck, then
recorder, a pretended referendum pe
tition endeavoring and attempting by
said petition to refer the ordinance to
the voters of the city at an election to
be held in Prineville on the 15th day of
December, 1909. That the attempted
and pretended referendum petition is
unlawful, illegal and void in the follow
ing particular :
That there is no election in or for said
City of Prineville on Dec. 15, 1909, or
other date except Dec. 20, 1909.
That the petition is written with a
typewriter, pen and ink ; that no por
tion of it is printed.
That the fetition so presented is upon
sheets of paper some 8 and inchea in
width by 13 inches in length, and the
sheets upon which the signatures of the
signers appear are inches in width
by 15 in length, and that none of the
sheet of paper in the petition are 7
inches in width by 10 inches in length.
That the referendum petition con
sists of two seta of petitioner with only
one full and correct copy of the measure
on which the referendum is demanded.
That the referendum petition so pre
sented consists of six sheets of paper four
of which are 8 inches in width by 13L
inches in length and two of which are
8)f inches in width and 15 inches inches
length in a cover securely fastened
together at the top margin with an ad
hesive paste of glue; that on both
sheets on which signatures appear is at
tached thereto by glue a slip of parer.
That said referendum petition was
presented to C. L. Shattuck as recorder,
personally and alone by said G. L. Ber
nier; that the same was not presented
in the presence of said C. L. Shattuck
as recorder, and D. F. Stewart as mayor
of the said defendant city.
ThatC. L. Shattuck, as recorder for '
the city, acted without authority of law
or right in the premises of receiving and
filing the petition. "
That the defendants, the officers of
the city, and each of them, refuse and
neglect to prosecute any violations nn
der the said ordinance, claiming with
out right that the ordinance is suspend
ed by reason of the said pretended refer
endum petition.
That the defendants threaten to and
will, if not restrained, refer said law as
called for by the referendum petition, to
the legal voters of the city at an election
to be called Dec. 15, 1909, and by so do
ing wi'.l cause expense and liabilities to
be incurred and created by reason there
of, such as printing ballots, printing
and binding referendum petition, and
printing and circulating arguments and
pamphlets thereof, thereby injuriously
and irreparably affecting plaintiff pe
cuniary rights as taxpayers, for which
injury, if permitted, plaintiff have no
plain, speedy or adequate remedy at
law.
Wherefore the plaintiffs pray for a
decree forever barring and restraining
the city and its officers from calling .or
holding an election on the referendum
petition.
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