Image provided by: Crook County Historical Society/Bowman Museum; Prineville, OR
About Crook County journal. (Prineville, Or.) 189?-1921 | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1916)
CROOK , COUNTY JOURNAL PAGE S & 3 1 Test Us On This! Even if the war and specu lation have sent the price of wheat up we still carry our usual line of flour. Best grades. Test us on this and other tlrnjs. Orders carefully filled. i. MRS. I. MICHEL Ti in City Dr. dirk, of Mmlrni, in in town t'lilay. John C. KukIi I i in tlu city toduy from Lumonta. Mr. Vim Allot) in hero toduy from IVwhuti. l'uulinu won n bull jfiune from Grizzly ycHtcrdny l'.)-3. K. H. Smith bought a Chcvort'li-t rur while in town hint wee k. Mr. and Mr. 0. A. I-ovcm-D arc in the city from Portland. Minn Anna .Sullivan in visiting wilh her bintcr hero thifc week. Dr. liruoks and wife, of F'ort land, are visiting at the llittKs' home. Jow ph I!. Kennedy am! Dr. Ida Ftehrendt were married last night in Rinlmond. " Chad. Hull of Mubton, Washing ton, yesterday bought several head of Hampshire sheep from C. M. KIkins, and 16 head of Hereford cattle from Will Font. Lelnnd lielknap arrived this morning from Portland where he is attending mcdirnl college. Dr. (!ove and Mrs. Abbic Gove were married liiHt week in Portland anil returned to Prineville, Monday, where they will reside. K. W. Gillam wax arrested the first of the week on a charge of contributing to the delinquency of a minor , He waived a preliminary hearing and was placed under a bond of $.")()() to appear before the grand jury. He is contractor on the Humes Mail line and has been in this community for some time. FORMER PRINEVILLE As the result of a cloudburst in Upper Hay canyon, Sherman county, last Friday evening, four persons lost their lives They are: Mrs. E. H. Lawrence, New Meadows, Idaho. Watches, Clocks, Diamonds and Jewelry Call on or write SMITH, the Jeweler Percy R. Smith v- irtjK.- n. '3 Like Gas "for comfovi: end convenience NEW PERfECTlON OIL CQOlfcSTOVE No coal, wood or ashes to lug no waiting for tho fire to burn up. UM , ter cooking because of the steady, evenly-distributed heat, under perfect control. All heat concentrated on the cookingand not radiated around the room. The long, blue chimneys prevent all smoke and smell. Bakes, bolln, roants, toasts. Mora efficient than your wood or coal stova and costs less to operate. ASK YOUR DEALER TODAY. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Culiturnia) For Best Results Use Pearl Oil Better cooking and a cleaner, cooler kitchen. Now serving 2,000,000 homes In 1, 2, 3 and 4- burnersizcs.with or without oven. Also cabinet models with Flreluss Cooking Ovens. 1 EAT ALL I WANT NOW AND FEEL FINE! No More Css on the stomach or Sour Stomschl No Mors Heavy Feeling After Meals or ConstlpStlonl If you have sour stomach, consti pation or mis on the stomach try JliST ON 15 SPOONFUL, simple buck thorn tmrk, Klyeerlno, etc., as rnlxnd In Aillrlka, tho MOST POWER Kt'l. liow('l rlnansnr evnr sold. The VKRY FIKHT (loso shows re Kiitis and a short treatment with Ad ler l kii will surprise you. It ilrtiliis audi unlonlnhlng amounts of old matter from the system that A HIXflM! 1)0813 relieves cottstlpa tinn,Mur Htonmch and aa almost INSTANTLY. A doss twice a week Kuarda agulnwt apptndlcltle. , Prineville Drug Co., George Nicolai, Pharmacibt J. E. Stewart & Co. O. C. Claypool & Co. W.F.King Co. CW.Elkins 1 a ess. Mrs. F. Fortner, her mother, Moro. John KuriHinan. Moro. 0. T. liurnKl. Moro. Mrs. Ed Fnrttii r and her da'iKh ter, Mrs. Iawrcrici', wore rcsiJcntH of I'rincvillc for many years, Mr. Fortncr having been in the sheep business here. Fred Fort nor, a son, is cashier of the Moro bunk where he has many friends. The bodies were recovered Sat urday morning by St archers. Mrs. Fortner had been carried about eight miles down the canyon. Mrs. Lawrence was found about one mile and a half awav, and the two men had been carried about three miles. The property damage is esti mated at from $l.r,000 to $20,000. Mrs. Fortner and Mrs. Lawrence were at the Fortner home when the deluge Ciime. The house was lifted from its foundation and swirled away. It was demolished within two miles. Kunsman, Burnett and Ray Havener, who had been working on the roads, were in a tent under a hillside when the storm broke. As soon as they realized the danger they ran to a knoll which faced the tent. There they withstood the first wave. When a second wall of water swept toward them, Havener and Burnett started across a small ravine. Burnett was lifted off his fett and became eptangled in a woven wire fence and drowned. Havener managed to use the fence as a rope and pulled himself out. Kunsman remained on tho knoll and was swept away. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Crook County. Jasper Johnson, Plaintiff, vs Richard R. Lawrence and Cora F. Lawrence, Defendants. To Richard R. Lawrence and Cora F. Lawrence: In the Name of the State of Ore gon, You are hereby required to appear and answer to the complaint tiled in the above entitled suit and Court on or before the ISth day of August, 1916, and if you fail so to appear and answeV, the plaintiff will anulv to the Court for tho relief prayed for in his complaint to-wit: K.r judgment against you and each of .'you for the sum of $350.00 with interest thereon at the rate oi ten per cent per annum from the 16th dav of June 1)14r For $,ri() 00 attorney's fees and for his costs and disbursements of this suit; For a decree of the above entitled Court' for the sale of the property described in plaintiff's complaint bv tho Sheriff of this county according to law, and that the proceeds of said sale be applie to the navment of nlaintirT's iiiilir . i ( - " ment, costs and accruing costs and that you and each of you and all persons claiming under you, be forever barred and foreclosed of hII right, title and interest in said premises and every part thereof and for such other and further relief as to the court may seem equitable. This Summons is published by order of the Honorable T. E. J. Duffy, Judge of the above entitled Court made on the 5th day of July, 1916, which said order prescribed that this Summons be published in the Crook County Journal, a week ly newspaper printed and published in rrineville. Crook Conntv n. gon, for a period of six weeks consecutively. Ihe date of tho first nnhli enrinn of this summons is July 6th, 1916. M. R. Elliott. 34t7 Attorney for Plaintiff. mi T riy i WHY NOT TAKE A LITTLE "FLY PRE 10 CAUTION" BEFORE THE HOUSE IS ime FILLED WITH FLIES Wld.K 24 M 24 DO fit 84 I'M FLY SCREEN-Painted Per Yard 50 Feet 100 Feet .13c .He ,lc ..I7ie .lKc .li)c .20c ..2.(H) .. .. 2.10. .. 2 25 . .. 2.40. .. 2WI. .. 2.60 . 2.70., ?3,70 a. 83 4.15 4.50 4.75 5.00 6 30 Width 24 2 2H 30 32 3i 36 FLY SCREEN Galvanized Pt Yard 50 Feet 100 Feet ..20c.. .21c ..23c .... ..24c .2fic .27c... .2c .12.75 .. 3.0).... .. 3.25 . 3.35 .. 3.50 .. 3.70 ..3 90 f5.20 5.65 .. 6 00 .. 6.. 'i0 .. 6.60 .. 7.00 .. 7 40 Fruit Jars, Caps and Rubbers Mason, pints 75 Mason, quarts 85 Mason half gallons. . $1.20 Economy, pints $1.10 Economy, quarts 1.20 Economy, half gal. . . 1 .75 A COMPLETE LINE Schram, pints 75 Schram, quarts 85 Schram. half gallons $1.20 of Caps and Rubber for all Standard Makes of Fruit Jars Heavy Castor Machine oil, per gal. 55, Gallon Cans $1.90 Hay Forks, Steel Cable, Rope, Pulleys, Oil Cans, Assorted Bolts, Wrenches, in fact most everything needed in hay harvest Equipment. Deering Cutting Machinery 1 You buy a DEERING MOWER you have purchased an im- Y (Qil plement that has been tried to the satisfaction of thousands JL&Cl of farmers. Ask the man who has used it You cannot attord to experiment at a saving of a few dollars on the cost of a machine at a critical moment. The purchase of a standard mower insures service when service is actually needed and repairs are always obtainable. w HarVQfr Slir.nlloe We make a specialty of filling orders for oifw vJUppilCb harvest time and are OFFERING SOME SPECIAL BARGAINS in Canned Goods, Coffee, Syrup, Dried Fruits, Pickles and other commodities. O. G. Claypool & Company PRINEVILLE, OREGON ' Such tobacco enjoyment as you never thought could be is yours to command quick as you buy some Prince Albert and fire-up a pipe or a home-made, cigarette 1 Prince Albert gives you every tobacco sat isfaction your smoke appetite ever hankered for. That's because it's made by a patented process that cuts out bite and parch! Prince Albert has always been sold without coupons or premiums. We prefer to give quality I L -l0" On the reversal iAm J li, . v- 9 I 1 t mm u On the reTerae tide of thi tidy red tin you will read: "Pro ces Patented July 30th, 1907," which has made thrmm men wnoke pipes where on smoked before I 10NGEUPN!NGPIP AND OCAETTE TOBACCO , I A 4 has a flavor as different as it is delightful, And that isn 't strange, either. s the national joy smoke You never tasted the like of it! Buy Princm Albert every where tobacco it told in loppy red bag; 5c; tidy red tine, 10c; handiome pound and half-pound tin Aumi dote and that corking fine pound crystal- glatt humi dor with iponge-moittener top that keepe the tobacco M euch clever trim alwayel Men who think they can't smoke a pipe or roll a ciga rette can smoke and will smoke if they use Prince Albert. And smokers who have not yet given P. A. a try out certainly have a big surprise and a lot of enjoyment coming their way as soon as they invest in a supply. Prince Albert tobacco will tell its own story 1 R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO, Winston-Salem, N. C. j Plan Now to come to the Crook County Fair and bring an exhibit. AH promises by the management will be fulfilled. Don't Miss Itt