Image provided by: Crook County Historical Society/Bowman Museum; Prineville, OR
About Crook County journal. (Prineville, Or.) 189?-1921 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 30, 1920)
4. ROOK tt)rXTY JU'RNAL Till UsHAY. IH KMltKIl AH, Msii. ' 5 .? 10 Mm a r.m a v. i r- wi Clarence Clendenen of Paulina was a business visitor In town last Monday. R. 0.'. Smith left last Wednesday evening (nr Seattle, Washington. T. J. Fergueson was a Prineville vlnltor from Bear Creek last week. ; Fraud Haner of Bend is visiting ' friends ill Prineville this week. He Guy l.fo..ette lett aunnay ,rrlved Wednesday morning. ing for Portland on a short business trip. Fischer C Logan from Barnes, w&s a business visitor in town Tues day. Carl C. Hyde left Friday evening fur Portland to attend to business In ternets there. Warren Brown arrived In town j Mr. and Mrs. Bergh returned to this city Thursday morning from val- ley points where they have been vis- j itlng. . I Mr. G. Nichol of the Western Bond and Mortgage Co. arrived In town Tuesday morning to attend to busi ness matters here. Miss Adeline Detrtcb ts visiting luesaay irom rU..u w . hef MrS- Joe Howard this business matters here. j Miss Detrlch is a former res- Mack Anderson arrived In town ! Ident of Prinevile. - Sunday from Portland to spend a tew j Mjgg L p ghelMg of days with friends here. Waiter Barney left last Friday evening for Hood River, to spend tie Holidays with his parents. J. O. F. Anderson and wife are spending the vacation days with friends and relatives here. j Mr. and Mrs. Cap Fuller spent! Christmas with friends in the valley, i Thev returned here Monday. I I Carey Foster spent several days in ! Portland the laBt of the week, Yisit-j Ing with friends and relatives. , Mr. Mayer of the bank was In Portland for Christmas, combining business with a visit at his home. ! White Chatauqua arrived Thursday morning to look after that work In this part of the country. Wallace Cannon arrived In town Sunday morning from Eugene to spend a few days with friends here. He will return the last of the week. D. O. Jones of Paulina arrived the first of the week to look over the work in the sheriff's office, as he will soon take up the duties as chief de puty sheriff. Mrs. Wallace Post returned to this city-Tuesday evening, after spending a few days with friends in Ho.-ul Riv er She left Wednesday morning for her home at Post E. X, Hull and family are visiting friends In Portland this week. j F. E." Studebaker of Bend was a business visitor in town Thursday, , Harold Baldwin was visiting in Portland slat Monday. He returned the last of the week, i W. H. Gann left Thursday morn-' ing tor Caldwell, Idaho, to attend to ! business matters there. Mrs. Eva Osborne left this morn ing tor her home at La Grande, after a short stay with friends her. L. D. Lafollette returned Thurs day from Spokane, where he has been with car load of sheep. Miss Jordan arrived In town the first of the week from Portland and other valley points, ijhere she has oeen ror tne past year. AT THE LYRIC i Raymond Smith arrived in town; g,, Wnite ex.Bherift of Linn Monday morning after spending -jC0Unty, arrived Tuesday evening for eral days with his mother to Port- vi8it witn ol(J triends here. He Is land- t very well known by the older resi dents of our city. Clarence Mertschlng left the last of the week for his home at Alfalfa, where be will visit for about two weeks. Gene Moone left on the Friday evening train for his home la La Grande, where he will spend the Holidays. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Lister of Pau lina arrived in Prineville Thursday, tor a few days visit with friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Willard P. Hershey and niece. Miss Beth Godbold, spent Chrunmas with Mrs. Gus Monner at Cateway. Marion Donahue arrived in town Thursday morning after spending several days with her parents In Portland. She will leave for her school at Suplee in a day or two. Wesley Allison and wife arrived last week from Corvallis, to maktt their home here. Mr. Allison is a former resident of Prineville and will be remembered by many of lbs local people. Trtai oy Jury. The estiil.li.sluii.iit of irlnl h i..rr lutes hark. prior l,i die time of Al fred Hi? tirvu:. He Is i,ld to ha v. or ganised juries of U men. as rtow In irtlee, bin even earlier lx WVlsh and six Auelo-Saxon freemen ..-r.l . jury wnen there was a dlKiut i- i "evn ueisn aim Faxons. FRIDAY AM SATl'KltAV ItlK NpcnliU Feature I l uxe! "Back to God's Country" PATHS REVIEW and COMEDY SO and 85 cents MNDAY AM) MOMMY "Trumpet Island" PATHS REVIEW and COMEDY Tl KSDAY "The Garter Girl" PATHK REVIEW and COMEDY "Mft'K AM hKXATOK" ,f W Klt.NKeiDAY "Man and His Woman" PATHE REVIEW and COMEDY MMaWMBSBMMnBSJBSSMWMBMSSBSBMakSSHawSM Till IOiDAV "The Marriage Pit" PATHE REVIEW and COMEDY Hadnt Escaped AitonMher. j Max w.-ts raclmr up the mrwt h"M Inc to (ho mjie which wti fastened to his lar.ire collie iW collar. Not heln.' j aMe to keep up any longer he wn ! Vrked to tile sidewalk with (front force I When his playmate was asked If M.-is bs hurt, he said: "No. he wasn't hurt, I but the doe d'd hlin a lot of diuimi:e." I -What "Cenotaph" Means. Several renders have written ask Ins I the meanlni; of "ronofaph." The word I Is derived from the Oreek words ; kenox, i:i.-:i iilnji "empty, and "ta ihos." meaning ' "tomb." In other words, a cenotaph Is a sepulrhral tnonunieni erected In honor of a per son mhose body Ilea elsewhere. london Tit-lilts. The New Pipe Organ will be used for the first time on New Years Eve. Edward E. Kiddle, Eastern Ore- gon member of the State Highway ' commission, died at his home near ; La Grande. Tuesdav morning, after ! ; a short illness. By his death. Crook Myrtle Moore, third grade teacher , county loses a very great friend, of the Prineville public school visited .with friends In p'ortland during the! B-v order of tn8 district attorney. Holidays. ; Willard Wirti, all cars, trucks, etc., not having the 1921 license by the Rev. Gallaher has purchased the first 0f the year, will not be allowed Hitching place on Ffth Street, one to operate upon public thorofares. block east of the Wonderly proper- under penalty of arrest, until such ty,- and will take possession soon. j licenses have been obtained. NOTICE The undersigned will not receive cream after December 81, 1920. Also, our unpaid checks drawn on the (4ook County Bank will be hon ored at the First Xatonal Bank of Prineville. , OCHOCO CREAMERY, Turner & Pease Co., Inc., By J. E. Adamson. Dated December 29. 1920. CARD OF THANKS Mus 0a Myers arrived in town last Thursday evening to spend the holidays with her parents here. She is teaching in Morton, Washington, j Ut. and Mrs. Horace Belknap ar rived Friday evening from Nampa, . Idaho, to spend the Holidays with Dr. and Mrs. H. P. Belknap of this City. j R. L. Jordan, who has been in Hillsboro Ore., for some time past.' ficiate of Deschutes, Wheeler and returned 'to Prineville last week to: Jefferson counties for the purpose of take np bis duties as county treas-: agreeing oa a general program of urer. i tne fur counties to be presented to the State Highway Commission nest Bessie McCullem returned to this city last week for a visit with friends and relatives for a short time. She Is attending high school in The Dalles. I The Central Oregon Chapter, No. S3 Royal Arch Masons, will hold its regular meeting next Wednesday ev ening at the Masonic Temple, for the purpose of taking up work in the Royal Arch Degree. All members and visiting companiong'are urged to attend. Judge Wallace will leave Sunday evening to meet with the county of- M)g Beth Godbold, an instructor in the State Normal School at Mon mouth, hag been sepnding the Holi days at the home of her uncle, W. -. P. Hershey. j ' Ross Robinson and son Allen left Thursday evening for Portland, to spend the Holidays with Mrs. Robin-1 son, who has been in Portland for! several weeks. j Victoria Huston arrived Saturday' morning from Morton, Washington, where she has been teaching school. ! She will visit with her parents until i the last of the week. j Nora Stearns left last Thursday' evening for Eugene where she will' remain through the Holidays, visit- j Ing with her parents who are spend-! Ing the winter, there. Ilda Chores returned to her home In Prineville last Saturday to spend the Holidays with her friends and ; relative's. She has been attending a business college In Portland. Donald Graham left Thursday ev ening for Portland, where he will I visit for a short time with friends' and relatives. Others leaving for Portland the same evening were: Messrs. Woodruff, Hainline, and Paxson. Tuesday. Mr. Wallace says that the engineers have completed the survey and all necessary data bag been re ceived on the road from here to the Jones' mill and hopes the Commis sion will advertise the Job for the February meeting. They are just completing the bridge at Crams' anj the road will soon be opened there. We wish to here express our heart felt appreciations for the many kind nesses shows us during the illness and death of our beloved wife and mother. J. M. Street and Eva. uations In "Trumpet Island", a spec tacular special production by Vita graph, which will be shown at the Lyric theatre on Sunday and Monday. MAX. AND HI.4 WOMAN The pdwer o f woman, her In fluence for good or for evil these are the big points brought out in this tense, gripping, story of a mun's downfall and his regeneration. It is a production that will appeal to the woman owing to the feature power of a woman's charm, and It will appeal to the men because of Its virile red blooded action. It Is a typical Blackton production from the Story by Shannon Fife. At tin Lyric, Wednesday, ItOll LA ltooi'K HAH 0 AMIHTIOV TO STAR. Rod La Roque, who plaji the rolt of Arthur Lyle in "The Garter Girl", Corlnne Griffith's new Vitagraph fea ture, which will be shown at the Lyric theatre on Tuesday, Is perhaps the only player on the screen who does not wish to be starred. La Itoque has recently refused several offers which would put his name in electric lights because be feels that each of them would have Interfered with his develnpinnt. 11 prefers to shift from company to company, playing only with turh players at.l in such rotes as will tend to breads bis experience and give him an op portunity to appear In parts ottur than what he calls "the ordinary walk-tn-and-walk-out leads." It undoubtedly this method that hn brought La Rocque to the envlablu position tn ftlmdom which he now holds. "The Marriage Pit", the newest photoplay starring Frank Mayo, that comes to the Lyric next Thursday, It from the novel "Black Friday," and gets Its title from that Ill-fated Fri day, many years ago, on which the Now York Stock Exchange exper ienced the most severe panic in Its history. A similar landslide of se curities is planned by one of the principal characters In the story. FRIEND GREATLY CONCERNED OYEK PRESENCE OF GC.N No wonder Allen Marsh was star tled and horrified when he saw Rich ard Bedell, his war time buddy with an army pistol in his hand. 'Many men have killed themselves for less than Richard had been through. No wonder either that Richard laughed as be explained to his friend the he was only Intending to pawn the weapon . for temporary relief from his troubles and not to use it to end them permanently. , The scene is one of many tense sit- T -Back o -fef -fr-wm t-w - -i' Vi -i -t. K A 5 PRINEVILLE MERCHANTS' ANNOUNCEMENT IN view of the unusual financial conditions affecting all parts of the country and all lines of industry, we the un dersigned merchants of Prineville find it absolutely necessary to require settlement in full of all accounts on the first of every month. This includes accounts run during the present month and also all previous accounts. Due consideration precedes this decision and it is deemed necessary if Prineville business houses are to continue. A means has been devised for the protection of solvent customers and for merchants as well. Customers are urged to pay cash whenever possible, as a general extension of even monthly credit cannot be assured. CORNETT & COMPANY THE W. F. KING COMPANY J. E. STEWART & COMPANY TRI-STATE TERMINAL CO. THE MICHEL GROCERY CO. PRINEVILLE MEAT MARKET LAKIN HARDWARE THE CALL TUM-A-LUM LUMBER COMPANY ,