NO. 20 MICHEL & CO. Tire You Goini to the FA IR? If you jm'', very likely you will wed citlicr n Trunk or a Suit Gase "NY have tliem in n number of styles and sizes ami prices to suit TRUNKS SUIT CAS j:s CLUli HACJS ti:li:sc()ii:s $.nO to $10.00 $:U)0 to $5.00 $1.00 to $1.50 $ .50 to $1.50 Before Huyinj; Come and Look These Over ft FURNACE COMPANY READY FOR WORK I 8 jjjjj i V wf&$ s 1 CLOTHING LEADERS $10 These are the best Suits ever offered at the price. They are Special Values and I cafry several different Patterns at the above price. They are all Fancy Worsteds and have Serge lining, Oavis and Hair Gloth Stiffening down the fronts and Padded Shoulders They look like $20.00 Suits and Some Would get that for Them Suilta Made To Ord-er $15 and "Cip Material for the Lookout fountain Plant Has Been Ordered and Shipped Officers Are Elected. C. M. Elkins and C. Fitzgerald returned this week from Portland where complete arrangements were made for the erection of a cin nabar furnace on Lookout moun tain on the property of the New A tamed an Gold and Quicksilver Mining company. While in Portland Mr. Elkins wan eucceenful in securing a trans fer of several outride interests, so that nothing stool in tho way of purchaHing the material for use in the furnace. All the fire brick and piping necessary was ordered and shipped to Shaniko and .will he brought in here as soon as pos sible. In fact everything to he used in construction will le on hand in a few days with the ex ception of soma clay brick which will le burned us soon as possible in the local yards. Mr. Fitzgerald will personally sujerintend the construction work ou the furnace and expects to have it completed and ready for use by the first of September, when it will immediately be put to work burn ing ore. The foundation will be laid in such a way that the furnace can be enlarged from time to time as greater service is needed. For the present it will have a capacity of ten or fifteen tons per day and the veins of ore in the tunnels, so far as tho development work has U'en carried, have placed on hand a six months' supply of cinnabar. Those who have subscribed stock in the furnace company will hold a meeting this afternoon at which time the company will be in corporated and officers elected. The capital stock will probably be placed at 110,000. everywhere. As a result of the war, the Russians ordered large supplies of ' woolen blankets, and owing to the cold climate, wool tents were also provided for the soldiers. This affected the price of the coarse wool. . 'People in Europe have had good times and are wearing better clothes, also. I expect to see the high prices continue, and probably rise for the next three years, and perhaps longer." SHEEPMEN'S HOPES ARE REALIZED MAURY MOUNTAIN RESERVE PERMANENT President Roosevelt signed a proclamation last Tuesday creat ing the Maury mountain forest reserve in the southeastern portion of this county. The new reserve comprises 51,300 acres of land lying in the moun tain range. The original amount withdrawn numbered 62,480 acres, but this area was afterwards re duced to the acreage noted above. The balance of the tract as first selected will be restored to enter. The Dalles land office received notification last fall that 10,000 acres of the temporary withdrawal had been restored to enter and that the office would be advised at an early date regarding the requir ed publication of notice of the date upon which the lands would become subject to entry, filing and selection. , Now that the president has signed the proclamation creat ing the permanent reserve, it is probable that the notice for publi cation will appear in a short time. The lands upon which filings will eventually be accepted lie in town ships 17 and 18 south of ranges 18 19 and 20 east. HIGH PRICES OF WOOL WILL CONTINUE PORTAGE ROAD WILL OPEN GREAT REGION the TAILOR fllacksmithing That Pleases Is The Kind You J. ;ct t.. II. WHILE'S (Successor to) CORN KIT & KLKINS'S A Stock of Farm Machinery always on hand Professional Cards, &. Clliott, jf ttornsy-at-jCam ZPrtntuill; Ortyon. ornoy mt-jCam ZPrinsvills, A. H. LIPPftf AN 8 GO. LICENSED UNDERTAKERS and Manufacturers of all Kinds FURNITURE hi: it I II Iril I A well known woolbuyer who is now in the city is of the opinion that the .present high prices of wool will continue for at least three years more, because of the increased demand throughout the entire world for woolen goods and! the great scarcity of sheep, says the Pendleton Tiibune. He Bays that there is a shortage in the United States alone of 18,000,000 sheep over two years ago. In speaking of the general situation the buver said: "The price of wool is from 30 to 00 per cent higher now than it was last year, and this is due to many reasons. One of these is the de crease in the number of sheep raised. The increased demand for mutton and the gradual shortage of range area have influenced this. Ortyon. By improved methods of handling mutton in cold storage, it is made more available for markets and the demand is increasing. "In addition to this, the limit ation of the range is causing the growers to have trouble in raising enough sheep to meet the demand for wool. Other kinds of farming are being practiced on what was formerly ranee, and men who originally had plenty of room for their herds now must lease land for them. The .government re serves are also interferring with the woolgrower and causing him to limit his herds. "The wool crop of America is about 10 per cent short of what - it was last year. In the Northwest the wool is, better in quality and lighter in Shrinkage, which more than offsets the decrease in pro duction. "But the increased demand for wool is universal, for more wool is being used throughout the world now than before. This is due to main street, Nkab Thb ochoco Bkiimik the Jananese and Russian war r PRINEVILLE, OREGON1 and to better financial conditions lighest Prices in Twenty- Five Years Are Paid for Clips at the Wool Sales in Shaniko. of Ca S. CduKt'ds JV. P. 33inap I County SPnysician) $ el knap 6c a f wards Physicians and Surysons. Of if &,ror Sost pX tt,mmo's Xh-usr Storo ' yrintttiH: Ureyon, JP. Ziosenberg IPhysician and Suryeon Calls answorotl promptly day r niynt Ofi'oo two doors sotttA o "Z7oinjtotom's . 2rj Sonm, &osim!onoo oomor st oatt 9faim Stroots. PrincvilU, Oregon, The Journal Printers. To The Particular Y ovr Ohdkr for any thing from catalogue. Commercial printing i card to a specialty "Now the portage road is the step to the real channel which wil give for all time lower rates and better transportation to the large agricnltural sections of Oregon Washington and Idaho," is the way Tom Richardson, of the Com mercial Club, regards the future for the Columbia River Basin, now that the last spike has been driven in the road which virtually forms a connection between that portion of the Inland Empire when facilities have been lacking. "The fact that a steamer has actually made the trip from Lewiston Celilo gives the basis for water rates and one that is recognized throughout the United States." Mr. Richardson, in support his statement, cites the case of the traffic on the Missouri and Mis sissippi Rivers between Kansas City and St. Louis, where the steamer Mason has been operated for years at the expense of Kansas City, and through which every point gets the same rate. Few in the Northwest, with the exception of those directly interested by reason of business connections, are more enthusiastic over the completion of the portage road than Mr. Richardson. Having seen the trade grow between Kan sas City and St. Louis to such large propartions, under what he terms identical conditions, with those which now confront Port landers, the agriculturists and stockraisers of the upper country, he feels the results to be attained here will prove enormous.. Such projects, Mr. Richardson says, have been brought to the attention of the Government and help for improvements in the way of navi gation aids has been given. He referred to the City of Galveston and other places on the Gulf where the Federal authorities expended millions of dollars. Allen Lewis, of tho Chamber of Commerce, who has been one of the ardent workers in securing the portage road, speaks most highly of the possibilities of the that line. When pressed for an opinion as to advantages to accrue from the line, Mr. Le,wis retorted the best evi dence he himself had was the fact he had attained the opening ex ercises, and he certainly would not have eone did he harbor the ODinion the portage road would not bring all the assistance to the sections both above and below The Dalles. Telegram. The expectations of the local wool men that clips would bring the highest prices this year re ceived for a quarter of a cenrury, were realized at Shaniko this week. Some of the county's wool was sold at a figure near 25 cents, but the highest prices went to outside firms. Over 48,00C fleeces of wool from this county, which would have been sold at the Shaniko sales, was previously contracted for at 20 cents. The Oregonian as the following to say regarding uesday's sales at which 1,600,000 pounds passed into other hands: The highest price paid for wool in Eastern Oregon in 25 years was paid to the growers of this section of the state at the public auction held here today. Ihe sales were conducted on the sealed bids sys tern, and prices ranged from 21 to 25J cents for Merino wools. One small clip of cross-bred Lincoln wool sold for 26 cents. These wools were formerly mar keted at The Dalles, but since the completion of the railroad to this point Bales have been conducted here. The prices are the highest paid this season at any Eastern Oregon point, and Wasco county maintains its reputation as the leading wool market in the state The high prices which prevailed at today's sales are especially grati fying to the growers, by reason of the fact that their loyalty to the sealed-bid system has been reward ed by from 3 to 5 cents per pound increase over prices paid those who contracted earlier. Fully three- fourths of the wool grown in the state were contracted during the winter and early in the spring, this section being the only noticeable exception where the offers of tempting "prices failed to make serious inroads into the clip to be marketed. Local growers who held are highly elated over the success of the public sales, while the few who contracted here are corresponding ly sorry that they did not stand by the sealed bid plyn. The suc cess of this year's public sales firm ly establishes the popularity and and watched grow for over 30 years, it was he who, settling upon land now covered by this city, made possible the building of a town, and it was due to his resi dence here that others of the older residents came to Crook county and make this place their home, converting a barren valley into a rich and productive region, and finally building a city on the land where Mr. Hodges had built the first habitation. Monroe Hodges was born in Allen county, Ohio, in December, 1833, and at the time of his death was 1 years of age. In 1847, at the age of 14 be crossed the plains with his father in an ox team and the family home was established in Benton county. Leaving there he went to Southern Oregon, then into Cali fornia to follow mining, for it was at the time of the gold excitement and people were pouring into the state from every direction. From the harships of that campaign he returned to Benton county a few years later, and in 1856 was mar ried to Miss Rhoda Wilson of Corvallis. Mr. Hodges' residence in Crook county began in 1871 when he crossed the mountains into this country and filed a homestead claim on the land upon which a greater part of this city now stands. A short time afterwards the Hodges addition to the town of Prineville was laid off. Soon after coming here Mr. Hodges became the owner of the Prineville Hotel, a business which he followed successfully for five years, then selling to other parties. Since that time he had maintained a continuous residence here, known and respected by young and old alike. Of the family left in sorrow over his loss there remains four child- Mrs. John L. Luckey, ren: Arthur Hodges and Louis Hodges of this city, and ' Mrs. George S. Wright of McMinnville. Mrs. Hodges and two sons, Edwin H. and Samuel, have preceded him to the grave. Among the list of in numerable friends and acquaint ances in the county, where he was , personally known by everyone ex cept the most recent arrivals, his death is universally regretted. The funeral services were con ducted at 10 o'clock last Tuesday morning by the Rev. O. W. Trip lett, pastor of the Baptist church, of which Mr. Hodges was a mem ber. Interment took place in the Union cemetery. SPINNING WESTWARD nrftvpD tri wisdnm nf trip Tlnn . r . .,im . ity ftf i nn This being the only point in the lAlliMI AllUj AKC state where a large quantity of the choice wools would be offered for sale on the sealed :bid plan, a large number of buyers were attracted to the sales, and 20 representatives f the leading wool merchants and manufacturers in the East and West were present. Owing to the quantity of the wool offerep the sales could not be completed today, and they will be continued tomorrow, when it is estimated that another million pounds will be sold. The follow ing were among the largest clips sold and prices lealized: Baldwin "Sheep & Land Com pany, 200,000 pounds at 23f cents. Prineville Land & Livestock Company, 125,000 pounds at 23j cents. Morrow & Keenan, nounds at 225 cents. " I !11 J - iu.: i- T R. R. Hinton. 100.000 uounds at wm P V w um. n t r l 29J Cents Jroui umna w i uucyiiio mo Thornaa Brmran. 80.000 rounds nmcmnes wm oe xorcea to come ' ' . u .... -nv,u 991 npnts acruso a luugu vuuutijr, aituuugu Charles Hilton, 70.000 pounds at the last half of their journey across 22 cents. the desert will be comparatively easy running. R. E. Simpson has received word to have 50 gallons of gasoline in" readiness for the machines, and it is not probable that the racers will' stop long here as each will make an effort to distance the other in the last stretch of the race. If no accidents happen, Prine ville will be reached early next week. Telegrams to Portland an nounce that the machines will reach that city about June 20. The two automobiles, which.will pass through Prineville on their race from New York City to Port land, will soon be in Oregon territo ry and will leave Burns, as far aa chedule can be trusted either next Sunday or Monday. Last Saturday the two machines were spinning across Wyoming "Old Scout" left Laramie about 50 miles in advance of "Old Steady," but it was stated in the bulletins received by the passenger depart ment of the O. R. and N. that the two autos will be neck to neck in the race by the time Boise, Idaho, is reached. It is expected that the gg qqq latter point will be reached today or tomorrow, then the machines DEATH OF AN OLD SETTLER The death of Monroe Hodges last Sunday morning, removed from the community one of the oldest settlers of this region and a man who was largely instrumental in the . upbuilding of Prineville, the city which he had helped to found and in which he had lived