Image provided by: Crook County Historical Society/Bowman Museum; Prineville, OR
About Crook County journal. (Prineville, Or.) 189?-1921 | View Entire Issue (July 17, 1919)
JV1.Y 17, 11)10. crook oothtt jourxal You Carry the Only Key Safe Deposit Boxes In our Fire-Proof and Burpuiar-Proof Vau:t may be rented by the year for a nominal sum. Absolute protection for your valuable papers and jewels Ask Us CROOK COUNTY BANK PRINEVILLE, OREGON 1 WILL Put a new top on your car, or repair your curtains, or do any such work as is needed WI UI TPUCC HARNESS and J. llUVjrlllO SADDLERY PRINEVILLE, OREGON Standard Furniture Co. BEND, OREGON IP YOU WANT TO BELL YOUR FURNITURE AND GET WHAT IT IS WORTH, WRITE US WHAT YOC HAVE AND WE WILL CALL AND MAKE YOC A CASH OFFER New and Second Hand Furniture Dealers "See here," I want to remind you about that small chew of this good tobacco. It tastes better because it's good tobacco. Its quality saves you part of your tobacco money. It goes further and lasts longer. THE REAL TOBACCO CHEW Put up in two styles RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco WB CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco CLASSIFIED ADS FOR HALE FOR BALE One first class 2-wheel trailer. Ireland's Transfer. 30tfc FOK SALE Good grain header. E. Wagoner, Prlnevllle, Oregon. 86t2c FOR SALE Beautiful, thoroughbred White Leghorn Cockerels, batched from O. A. C. eggs In March. If taken young, $1 each. A.W.Pratt, Post Oregon. Htfo FOR SALE Two mares, wt. 14U0. wagon and burnous, all in good condition. Joe Zounattl, Prineville Oregon. 34t4p FOR SALE 4 head of horses, 1 team 8 and 9 years, wt. 1250 each, 1 team 4 and 6 years, wt. 1400. All sound and well broken. Call at this office. 34tfc ISoriCK TO I UBDC I have opened up a new shop In the rear of Redby 1 odglng House at 4th and C streets in Prlnevllle auo am prepared to do all kinds of first class building and The W. For McCormack Standard Binder Twine Price Guaranteed says the Good Judge job work promptly at reasonable prices. I do lurnltura repairing, upholstering, sign painting, tool grinding, saw filing, also painting. Brick, concrete and cement work, roofing, excavating, and many oth- . er things. Special woodworm of all kinds to order. As I Intend to lo cate In Prlnevllle, I therefore solic it a fair share of your p&'rouage. If you want prompt service and fair treatment, give me a trial. Op en evenings. Phone 631 Black. Ll nier J. Wilson. S4tfc BEFORE YOU SIGN a life lnsur. ance contract in any other com pany examine the superior con tract and low premium rates ol Oregon Life. See. T. L. Qulnn the local agent. 24tfo WANTED WANTED Anyone wishing services of experienced nurse pleaBe call Mrs. Custer, Black 163. Stfc WANTED I will pay 80o for dry long wool pelts and 30c for dry beef hides, f. o. b. Prlnevllle See Frank Winer,. 853 6th St. 28tfo SEE F. King Company WANTED Plowing by the day 01 acre. Addrew II. Z. CroM, Prlne Tllle, Oregon. I4tfc WANTED Passengers for Klamath Kalis. Pars 110. Leav Sunday morning. Bee Inland Auto Co SCtlp LOST Pair of ladles Uo kid street gloves In Chautauqua tent. Leave at Journal office 86tfp LOST Somewhere between Prlne v 1 1 1 and tho 11. 8. Cram ranch, a spure Maxwell whwl fitted with old Goodrich, tire. Kinder leave at Journal office or notify H. 8. Cram t Hons and receive reward. SGtlp LOST -Brown Miirn, wt. 1100 lbs., and 1 yearling colt. Brand f4 bur on ! caili shoulder. Both brands aiirn ). i 110 rfwar:!. V. Dykstra, Bend,! Oregon. .... 34(2p: FllKHH VKUKTAISLES Delivered I from the Seven Springs gardens on Tuesdays and Saturdays. Leave all orders at Cornett & Co., or' phone itural 718. J. L. Miner and Sun. 38tfc PHYHKlANlt BELKNAP A EDWARDS Chas. 8. Edwards, H. P. Belknap, Physicians Surgeons and Oculists, Prlnevllle. Oregon. tt DENTISTS . OR. H. 0. DAVIS Dantlst. Nn modem shop. In Kamatra Build tag. ATTORNEYS WILLARD H. WIRTZ District At . torney. Office Crook County Bank Building, PrlnoTllle. Oregon tl H. R. ELLIOTT Attorney at Law Court House St. Prinsvllle, Or OPHTHALMOLOGIST DR. r. H. DAT Physician, optha Biologist, neurologist. Specialty of eyes and net-res. Q lasses fitted. Hours: t to 11:80 a. m.; 1.S0 to I p. m. Evenings by appointment Prlnevllle Hotel, Prlnevllle, Or. tl LAKE M. BECHTELL U. B. Commissioner Attorney-At-Lew Crook County Bank Building PRI NEVILLE . . OREGON DR. I. 1L GOVE DENTIST PrlnevUle, Oregon Office over Crook County Bank CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SERVICES At Masonic Temple every Sun- day at 11:00 a. m. All welcome Sunday school for all under 20 years of age ot 10:00 a. m. NOTICE TO PCJSLIC Anyone wishing to make sleeping car reservations will plaase cnil the agent before n en nu tlia (lay they desire to leave. Make money In your home town In spare time. Sell hosiery with a guarautee. The kind that won't wear out. Ready mar ket In your own neighborhood. Big money maker. Experience unnecessary; we teach you. PHOEXIX HOSIERY CO. West Market Ht, Station, Philadelphia, Pa, yeWieeweweewe,rfef OU DAILY JOURNAL DAILY 80c DAILY AND SUNDAY OSc If yaa tfoat Ret your paper reg ularly, phone Red 431 and we will send one np by special mes senger. PRINEYTLLE DRUG CO. Local A goat CHICHESTER S PILLS W. TUB DIAMOND BRANUL A Cbl-eaaa-tee Dlasiaaj Broalf( Pllla la He sod Uold siettlUckV boict, staled tth Blua Ribbos, VI S reTA. Aike C ift -?,f f DIAMOND II RAND PlUAksM rmn known ai Bert, sunt. Atom kataMl SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYVfflffl SCALE BOOKS Neatly printed and bound. Send $1.00 to the Journal and one will be maile you, postage paid. tttt ! 1 MAXIMILIAN HARDEN T 4 iA t -a i. Maximilian Harden, editor of Die Zukunft of Berlin, who it is reported will be German ambassador to the United States. GERMAN BLOCKADE HAS BEEN LIFTED Washington. With the lifting of the ( blockade against Germany trading bv i tween that country and the United States, as well as with the other as sociated powers became lawful. Acting Secretary of State Polk an- ! nounced that blanket licenses would be Issued for transactions of American firms. Trading In all commodities ex cept dyestuffs, chemicals and potash control over which will be exercised by the reparations commission set up . by the peace reaty will be unrestrict ed. American firms doing business with Germany must send tbelr agents Into that country without passports, however, as these cannot be Issued un til the proclamation of peace. It also was said at the state department there was no certainty when American con suls would be sent to Germany. While Germany has large quantities of goods ready to be exported, officials doubted that there would be any great demand for them In this country. Germany was said to be In Immedi ate and pressing need of raw materials of almost all kinds, particularly cotton and copper. In order to rehabilitate her industries. ARMY FOOD PRICES LISTED War Department Fixes Prices for 1 Surplus Stocks. Washington. Prices at which sur plus stocks of canned and cured meats : held by the war department will be sold to municipalities were announced as follows: Corned beef from $3.60 per dozen cans to (24, dependent upon sizes and : grades. I Roast beef, from $3.48 per dozen cans of one pound each to $26.40 for six pound cans. Corned beef hash, $2.76 per dozen 'cans of one pound eachtand $4.80 for : two pound cans. ( Bacon In crates, 34 cents a pond; In 12-pound tins, 36 cents a pound. I These prices are about 20 per cent : less than the cost to the government. I Proposals must be for a minimum ! of one carload. Queen Marie to Visit United States. New York. Reports that Queen Ma rie of Roumania intends to vUlt the ! United States were confirmed In ad vices received by the Atlantic division of the Red Cross from workers in the Balkan kingdom. THE MARKETS Portland Oats No. 2 white feed, $55 per ton. Barley Standard feed, $59.50 ton. Corn Whole, $78; cracked, $80. Hay Timothy, $3234 per ton; al falfa, $26. Butter Creamery, 52c per pound. Eggs Ranch, 43c per dozen. . Poultry Hens, 2627c; broilers, 27 Cattle Market steady; steers, best, $9.5010; good to choice, $99.50; medium to good, $8.50 9. ; Hogs Market steady; prime mixed, $21.5022; medium mixed, $20.5021; pigs, $18.7519."5. Sheep Market steady; prime lambs, $11.50 13. 50; fair to medium, $910; yearlings, $6 8.50; wethers, $737.50; ewes, $67.50. , Seattle Hay Eastern Washington timothy, ?3536 per ton; alfalfa, $29 per ton. Butter Creamery, 63c per pound. Eggs Ranch, 47 19c per dozen. Potatoes Eastern Washington, $40 (S43 per ton; local, $20 30. Poultry Hens, heavy dressed, 35c; light, 30c; broilers, dressed, 3036o. Hogs Prime, $21.7622; medium to choice, $21.5021.75; pigs, $19.50021. Cattle Best steers, $10.00 10.50; medium to choice, $99.60; best cows 'id heifers, $7.608.50; calves, $70 4. -AZ1NESS ACTING AS SPUR Seed Work Done by Those Who Dis like It, and Want to Get Through and Rt The best work Is done by the Istt people who want to get through and rest. The Industrious, active body. busy ss a l)-e. and always at it, Is very li able to become a putterer. , Murk Twain called attention to the fart that the 'ant, to whom the mure recommended the- slutfKnrd to go. pi-nclH most of his pnergy In running nromiil like a drunken Imlltin. The great hnmorlHt hv'l to move; he ij"i( to give the boy in 'be print Inn: ofllcp a nlrkel to sweep around Iiim. so Hint he would not hove to tuke 111 feet off the tlilile. At seventy he cofifexxed Unit "all exercise is lonth some." Liizlriex Is not good In Itself : but when Joined to conxolentioiii-iieitx and s seuw of responsibility, a It often Is. It Is the very bext worker. The world's work Is done by those who do not like It Nine persons out of ten would quit what they are do ing If they could. At the very beginning of Arnold Bennett's novel. "Hilda Lensways," Is luminous bit of philosophy: "Hilda hated domestic work, anil because she hated tt she often did tt passionately and thoroughly." Mark Twain hated to write. Dr. Frank Crane, In Farm Life. MUST CONCENTRATE TO WIN Though Thorough Absorption May Be Carried Too Far, It Is Necessary to Success. There Is always danger, when any. one tfticoatrates, that the concentra tion will he carried too far so far that It produces a, narrow, one-sided and warped point of view, The great scientist, the great scholar, the great thinker In any- line Is usually not an all-around "good fellow." "Crabbed," "queer," "peculiar,' "odd," "funny" and "warped" are these not the ad jectives that generally describe the geniuses of the world? 1 The very ef fort to concentrate on the one sub ject which has brought success has made It "Impossible to keep In touch with the thousand-and-one currents of thought and topics of conversation which go to make up comfortable and easy going life. Llke the old sea cap tain, these geniuses rulxs something In their effort to fix their attention on one thins. In spile of this danger. It Is a good thing to work for concentration. The likelihood of becoming one-shied Is big where genius Is concerned, but then It can be excused. . Most of us can safely concentrate our attention aDd still feel sure that we will keep in touch with the world about us. Need for Eternal Vigilance. "We fjrst niuke our habits and then our habits make us," said an unknown sage. In other words, what we are at this moment, what we can do at this moment, depends not only upon wak ing up our minds at the time btring, but also upon how we have made up our minds countless other times in thousands of minutes already gone by and now out of our control. The one thing we cannot control Is the past; It may, however, control us for good or for evil. The fact that we should remember In forming habits Is that our minds and hearts are the meeting ground of strange conflicts; tbat good and bad In us are making opposite suggestions; that each Is striving for the mastery; and that sometimes we are so self-deluded that the bad may seem to be the good. At any hour the beginnings of a vicious habit, perhaps through the suggestion of someone else or by our own carelessness, indif ference, or faults, may find their way Into our hearts. The price we must pay for continually proving and pos sessing the good is eternal vigilance. Exchange. Discouraged Aids to Beauty. In the duy of Louis XIV LaBruyere wrote this: "If women only desire to be beautiful In each other's eyes they may, of course, follow their own ca price or taste as to the way In which they dress and adorn themselves; but if they desire to please men, If It Is to churm them they rouge und paint. I can assert In the name of mankind, or at least of those men whose votes I have taken, that white and red paints make women look old and hideous; that it Is as disgusting to see women with paint on their faces as with false teeth In their mouths and waxen balls to puff out their thin cheeks; and that far from countenancing It, men solemnly protest against all such arts, which in fallibly tend to cure them of love." The wonder arises If LaBruyere spoke only for the men of his time. The Crow's Voice. The crow is one of the most widely disliked of birds. His reputation la bad, and Is probably deserved. No matter how long you study the crow, you will always have something to learn, and at the end of all your study he will know more about you than you will about him. At times It seems as If he knew what you were thinking about. The crow has a. large variety of notes or calls, and each one seems to be the harshest In all bird vocallsm until the next one is sounded, which Is a little harsher. He is an accom plished bird, and Intelligent If tamed, he can be taught many things, but never to be good. He Is a natural thief, and cannot be reformed. N. turn NOTICE FOK Pt'BLICATION DpsrtrTMnt of th. Interior, U. S. In4 Of flr t Th DeIIm. Oman, lvy f, Kit. NOTICB Is Hrn-br Uivrn That BRICR t. MrMFKN of Prtnrlll, Oroa, ho, m Jnhr IS, lilt, made hnmmtcad Knlry Nu. (i!iii, for 8fcW NWI4. 8W4 NEl,. WI4 Wt Set. 1, N IJ, NBV,. SWl NK'i. NW'i BBU Sw. SO, TowTwhip 1 Smith, IUtim IS Ksst, WillaiMH Mrrtdlaa, ha filed notlc of fntentloa as awa Kinsl Thrw Year Prf to r.lMih clain to th land ahnra desr-ibMl hmfon Uka M Baaa. tell, U. S. Commi.sionep. at PHnavUla, Onaoe. on th Uth day of Aurun, 191S. Claimant names as wltncanea: fiMy K. Brren. Carl J. Sunit.iul.t, Numa T. MrCoin, Jeff D. Evan, all of Prineyllla, Oreeon. 6t&c H. FRANK WOODCOCK. Reaiatev NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC ' In nrrier to -"void further confusion I hereby wish to announce to the pub lic that I am carrying on my building and wood workins- business under my own name, ELMER J. WILSON, and am Independent of and not connected if-fh any other Wilson In this com munity. I wish in this way to state that I do not wish to work on anoth er's reputation, nor expect him to work on mine. Please remember my name. ELMER J. WILSON, 34t4p Shop on Fourth and C Sts. Ne. S1S32I NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Dpsrtment of the Interior. U. 8. Land Of fire at The Dalles. Oregon. Jute 1, 1919. NOTICE It Hereby fiieen That . FREDERICK A. POLK. of Poat, Oregon, who, on October 2ft, ISIS, made Homestead Entry No. 015521 for West Half (W'ijl Section S. Townnhlp 17 Booth, Range 20 East Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of Intention to make Final Three Yemr Proof, to establish claim to the land above de scribed, before Lake M. Bechtell, U. 8. Com missioner at Prinerille, Oregon, on th 18th day of August, 119. Claimant names as witnesses: Robert Demaria. Caleb Davis. Raymond E. Smith, sll of Post, Oregon, and Edwin A. Ab bott, of Prlnevllle. Oregon. lata H. FRANK WOODCOCK. Register NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN By the undersigned, the Administrator of the Estate of Ralph Cross, De ceased, to all creditors ot said De ceased and to all persona ha vine; claims against said Estate to present the same with the proper voucher to the undersigned at the office of M. R. Elliott at Prlnevllle, Oregon, with in six months from the first publica tion of this Notice. Dated and published first time Inn 19th, 1919. R. B. CROSS, Administrator of the Estate of Ralph Cross, Deceased. 32tSc lS82e-tlSl(f NOTICB FOR PUBLICATIOV Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Of fire. The Dalles, Oregon, June II, 1919. NOTICE is hereby gi'tn that ' BENJAMIN B. GHOFP of Post. Oregon, who, on August St, 1914, made Homestead Entry No. I'13M0 nnl on June 24, 1916, made Additional Entry No. OlfilSA, for EU, SEV, Sec 6, NE, SEV4 and NEV4 See ft. SWV4 NWV,. Sec 9. Township 17 South. Range 19 East, Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make Final Thrse Year Proof to estsblish claim to the land abov- described, before Lake M. Bechtell. U. A. mmisaionr at Prineville, Oregon, on t.ie th iay . 1 August, 191. Claimant names is wftnessei: Edward B. Knox. Daniel -V. iCnox, Samuel Newsom, Homer Norton, nil .f I'ost. Oregon. H. F8.VNK WOODCOCK. Ut5c Regiatel 9IJ21S NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Of fice. The Dalles. Oregon, June 21, 1919. NOTICE is hereby given thrt ALDI3 G. BROWN of Prineville, Oregon, who, on February 1915, made Homestead Entry N 113219. for Stt NE, See 9 SW NWK Section 10. Township 16 South, Range It East, Willamette Meridian, has filed notice or intention to make Final Three Year Proof to establish claim to the land above described before Lake M. Bech tell, U. 8. Land Commissioner, at Prineville Oregon, on the 8th day t August, 1919. Claimant names as witnevjeri : John P. Hopiter. Leland Casey. James A. Moffitt, Roy Moffitt, all of Prineville, Oregon. a. r KA.X-1 WOOUl'OCK. SStSe Register Auto Owners Attention ! Do you want to eliminate 90 per cent of your tire troubles? Do blowouts and punctures rob you of the enjoyment of motor ing? Do you like to buy new tires frequently or would you rather have twice as much mil eage or half as many new tires? If this interests you then see Agent for IXSYDE TYRES Cobby Stroud, Agt CENTER OF INTEREST SHIFTS TO SENATE Washington. Signing at Versailles of the peace treaty with Germany for mally brings to a close the world's greatest war. Although technical termination of the war will come to each nation only when the treaty Is approved by the ratifying power of that nation, to all Intents and purposes the conflict that began in August, 1914, ended when lm the historic hall ' of mirrors the ac credited peace commissioners affixed their signatures to the treaty. With the departure from Paris of President Wilson, the center of In terest as regards the treaty shifts to the senate, ratification by which is necessary for actual termination of the war between this country and Ger many. Due to opposition to the league of nations covenant a part of the treaty and to certain provisions of the treaty itself, the contest In the senate is expected to be long and Meter.