LOCAL MENTION LOCAL MENTION LOCAL MENTION LOCAL MENTION LOCAL MENTION. Miss Knox returned from Port land Saturday. Born June 2t. to the wife of L. C. Loiran of Haycreek, a son. C Montgomery ami X, A. New bill of Grizzly were business visitors Saturday. Miss Theresa Cassidy leaves to morrow for her home at Clearwater, Minn. This will I her first visit home for three years. Mrs. E. J. Sumner fell and broke her arm Monday. Di. Edwards re duced the fracture and reports his patients as doing as well as could be expected. Rev. Prater and family sient last Friday at the home of Geoiye Slay ton. They say it was a day of joy and gladness. Fine farm and good crops. Farley that will make 70 bushels an acre. Miss Edith and Jimmy King are home on a visit. The Misses Elizabeth and Ellen Brobst left Wednesday morning for j Portland. Wade Huston has received his; final receipt from Uncle Sam for! the e of ne.U' . the sw.V of the nit' j sec 28 tp 11 range 16. This is valuable coal land. Frank Roberts came over from1 the valley Monday with a band of j fancy Jerseys which he is offering for sale. H w-ill be in Prineville a ; few days and then go to Heppnerv Oregon. j The Prineville ball team left for ' Madras yesterday, where they w ill play the Madras boys for a purse of , 1 100 to the winners and $23 fori second money'on the Fourth. All members of the first team could not get away. ! Howard V. Turner was a Madras visitor yesterday. Will Wurnveiler and son Arthur left for the metropolis today. J. G. Bolter. J. 11. Garrett. P. T. Monroe and C. E. Johannsen came in from Cross Keys yesterday. Charles H.tight, who lives at Cow canyon, is reported very sick. It Is said that he cannot live but a few days. - Mr. and Mrs. D. L, Wylde will move to Culver thejast of the week where Mr. Wylde has 200 acres of land. He is going to cut part of this acreage into town lots and put it on the market. Articles of incorporation of the Bend Hardware Co. have been filed with the county clerk. Capita) stock. 25,000. The incorporators are Floyd Dement, Martin D. Knntson and J. M. Lawrence. Democrats Nominate ; Union Services ; Prineville Tennis Wilson and Marshall for July and August: Players Enjoy Trip; Mr. and Mrs. E. 11. Smith left Wednesday for a week" stay at their ranch up the Ochoco. Rev. Prater will preach a sermon Sunday at 11 a. m. Sunday that will be in harmony with national holi days. E. Barnes, deputy forest super visor has been transferred to Wal lowa. The change took effect July 1, Mr. Barnes expects to leave Prineville next Saturday for his new field of labor. The modern Woodmen Band has just received new mellophone of a new make, the first and only one of its kind on the coast. The instru ment has been erfected only' a month ago. One of the best players in the city of Chicago remarked only a few days ago that he had never seen a horn that could touch it for perfection of scale and tonal beauty. Clean up. Cut your weeds. Mrs. Lewis Wylde and family left Sunday for Lakevlew. Dr. W. J. Curtis, the eye social ist, will be In Prineville this week. He will visit his brother for a couple of weeks. The Prineville Concert Band bought a new baritone horn with the proceeds of the dance given recently. It is a fine Instrument. Johnny Morgan left Friday for Paulina to send a month's vacation. Mrs. Korris Morgan will attend to the duties at "centrnl" until Johnny returns. Miss Nellie Summers, who was not expected to live the last of the week, is a little better, according to later reports. Mr. and Mrs. Sum mers are with Nellie in Portland. She is suffering from a severe at tack of pneumonia. LOCAL MENTION County court Is In session thia week. Gillis Woodward l bark at his old Job in E. H. Smith's harncw shop. Prineville is deserted today. Peo ple are celebrating the Fourth at Bend, Redmond ami Madias. Dr. MucFadden and wife left yes terday for a six-weeks' outing at Belknap Springs, On his return he will open offices In the Kumstra building. M. J. U-mons ()f Fife came over from Bend yesterday, where he de livered ?iXK) head of weathers that W. W. Brown recently sold to Mr. Graves. The sheep will be shipped ; to Wyoming for the summer and then gruin-fed in Kehraka lfot being sent to the Chicago market. Mr. Brown received 2.23 for year lings and 12.00 for two- and three-, year-olds. This was six weeks ago. Now he could get 2'ic more a head. For president. Governor Wood row Wilson, of New Jersey. For vice-president. Governor Thomas K. Marshall, of Indiana. This Is the ticket completed by the democratic national conven tion at Baltimore at 1:56 a. m. Tuesdays There were 46 ballots cast for president The nomination of Governor Marshal for vice president by ac clamation after the second ballot came as something of a surprise, for when the night's balloting for vice-president began it seemed that the Bryan-Wilson conting ent in the convention had defin itely settled upon Governor Burke of North Dakota. There was not much of a fight, however, and when two ballots disclosed Marshall steadily in the lead, Governor Burke's name was withdrawn and Marshall proclaimed the nominee by accla mation. A minute later the convention had adjourned sine die. A Pleasant Time at the M. E. Church July 78 p. m. At the Presby ter'an church. Music by the union choirs. Miss Williams will sing. Sermon by the pastor of the Chris tian church. July 14 Union services at the M. E. church. General music by the union choir. Special music by trained voices. 'Sermon by the pas tor of the Presbyterian church. July 21 Union services at the Baptiit church at 8 p. m. Sermon by Rev. LeRoy, stated supply. Good music by the union choir. July 28 Union services at the M. E. church. Sermon by Rev. Williams. Good music by the union choir. Special music by good sing ers. The public in general are invited to attend all of these services. A very pleasant social event oc curred Monday evening at the M. E. Church, when the gentlemen of the church entertained the Ladies' Aid Society and the choir. After listening to a splendid pro gram consisting of music and in structive and interesting papers, the guests formed partners and ad journed to the parlors of the church where an elegant spread had been prepared by the gentlemen. John Smith acted as toastmaster. Toasts were responded to by Messrs. Coe, Dinwiddie, Elkins and Lafol lett. In the absence of the presi dent of the Ladies' Aid. Mrs. C. W. Elkins responded for the ladies. About forty guests were present and at a late hour departed for their homes with feelings of highest praise and gratitude to the Metho dist men who had left nothing un done in showing the ladies a royal good time. A Good Chance to Get Feeders C. P. Judge, the North Portland cattleman, announces in another I column that he has yearling heifers and one- and two-year-old steers that can be had on easy terms by men who have the pasture and hay i to take care of them. The cattle wi'.l be sold by the head or pound 8t the option of the buyer. More than thi3, the stock can be returned by the same method and the growc r gets the difference in cash. Boys Have Fast Ride On Main Street M. W. A. Band Will Give Musical The M. W. A. Band, assisted by the Misses Williams, will give a musical at the M. E. church, Tues day evening, July 16th. The boys have invested over $500 in instru ments and there is yet $175 unpaid. Come out and help the boys along and hear something well worth your money. The program will appear next week. Sylvan Michel and a couple of small companions had an exciting time for a little while Monday while eut driving. Sylvan got out on the shafts to fix the checkrein and then horse commenced to buck. The lit tle chap that was holding the lines dropped them and the horse started to run. It made for the alley be tween Whiteis' Cash Grocery and the Journal office. The buggy struck the sidewalk at the entrance and turned bottom side up. Sylvan Btuck to the back of the horse and his companions crawled out from underneath the buggy unhurt. Be yond smashing the shafts very little damage was done. Dr. Colder Coming. Dr. A. L. GoUler, eyeeiidit specialist of The l'allee, Bill be in Prineville toon to lit glaubei. Watch for date. : 7-4 Ferndale Man Invests In Crook County 0. D. Derdorff of Ferndale, Wash., has been interested in the I development of Central Oregon for j a long time and last week concluded I to give the country a personal in jspection. He did so with the re sult that he is now financially inter ested in the country. He bought road land. He will come here this fall with his family and he says that he has neighbors that will follo'v him. They are the right sort of people to develop a new country. Hay Baling Will bale hay by the ton or by the day to unit customer. Terms reasonable. Good outfit. Address Kn Smith, Prine ville, Oregon. 6-2" lm-p House for Sale. New five-room bungalow, with space for three large roome on second floor. Pantry with built in fhelves, bins and drawern. Built in buffet, bath toilet, basement. Terms, $1U)0 down, balance eaey terms. Address I)r. I!. D. Ku'tciirM, liend, Ore. ()-lt Parties looking for a cheap piano should call on A. H. Lipnman i Co A snap. 6-20 J Prineville added more laurels to her athletic fame last week when a tennis team, consisting of Dr. J. H. Rosenberg. H. McCall, A. R. Bow i man, F. L. Brewster and L. M. 'Becli tell, defeated the The Dalles ' club in three straight sets and tied ' with the Hood River men with five sets each. j The boys made the trip overland ' with Dale Barker in his Pope-Hartford, leaving Prineville Tuesday ; morning at 4 a. m. and arrived at The Dalles at 3 p. m., meeting the I Dalles team that afternoon and de j feated them. That evening the ' Prineville boys were treated to a banquet and shown a general good j time. The next afternoon the j Hood River Benedict Tennis Club was met, and it was agreed before the match that eight Hood River men could participate, which ne cessitated the Prineville men meet ing a frest team after each "best two out of three set," and was a decided advantage to the Hood River men. Each team won five "oest two out of three sets." .The Hood River club also gave the local boys a nice banquet and wanted to take them through the famous valley the next forenoon on an automobile trip, but the boys could not stay on account of getting an early start on the return journey. Frank Cram a prominent Hood River merchant and farmer Prineville boy, was one of the Hood River players. Both The Dalles and Hood River clubs will come to Prineville later on to play a return match with the local players. "The Colleen Bawn" At the Lyric In order that it might produce a number of distinctly Irish photo- j plays under conditions where all possible local color and exact de- 1 tails eotilrl he hroncrht out And ac curately shown, the Kalem Company last year sent a thoroughly equipped company of actors, actresses, camera men, etc., to Ireland, where the above entitled play, by Dion Bouci cault, was produced in the exact places as described by the play I wright in the original play. The story is well told in three reels of pictures, and show many typical scenes of the Emerald Isle, among others, Lake Killarney, the Gap of Dunloe, and many of the identical places immortalized by the dramatist. The entire three reels will be shown Friday and Saturday evening at the Lyric at the regular admission price. Found. Gold link bracelet. Owner may have same by describing md paying for thi adv. S. L. WcKlroy', Roberts, Or. t(-27 To the Public. 1 have secured a renewal of the mail contract between Prineville and )t-d-inond and will continue to nerve my patron in both places to the be.t jf my ability. All exprees matter will re ceive my personal attention. Ko'icitinx a share of your patronage. I remain, respectfully, 5-10 Mvtr Kl'li.4LK. Crook County Journal, county oflicial paper, f 1.5'J a year. Removal Sale Last week we began this sale preparatory to removal to our. new location. This week we quote cash prices on a few of the many lines displayed and guarantee money savers in every quarter. You will find this a splendid opportunity. It means just what is advertised. Ex ceptional values during our removal sale. Terms Cash. Ladies' Duster. Large full styles, all sizes in Linen, and Linene 12.75 grade, reduced to 12.10 3.50 grade, reduced to 2.90 5 00 grade, reduced to 4 15 7.50 grade, reduced to 5.85 Ladies' Suits. In Linen or Heavy Corded Goods. t 6 00 grades reduced to 1115 8.50 grades reduced to 5 85 12.50 grades reduced to.... 7.05 Ladies' Fancy Gingham and Lawn One Piece Dresses. Dainty patterns male by J. E. Walker & Co. 12.75 grades, removal price 12.05 3.50 grades, removal price 2.S5 3 75 grades, removal price 2.95 4.00 grades, removal price 3.10 Shirt Waists Lateit spring styles, white or colored, 11.50 grades 11.15 2.25 grades 1.60 2 75 grades 2.00 4.00 grades 2 85 Black Lawn Shirt WaisK $2.00 grades 11.35 1.50 grades 1.15 Sizes 34 to 48. Petticoats in Ginghams. Fancy Suitings and Black Sateens are re duced in line with other Removal Sale prices. Ladie's Dress Skirts Cotton in white or colors, choice each. . .11.00 Heavy Kakbi, $3.00 grade at $2.00 All wool Panama in colors, 15.50 to $7.50 grades removal price reduced to $3.50 and $1 50. Ribbons 25c grade reduced prica per yard 17c. 45c grades removal price, per yard 25c. 50c grades removal price per yard -)0c. 60c grades removal price per yard 45c. Large lot of f.incy silk ribbon, all reduced about j in price Laces, Embroideries, Silks, Satins, Meioaline all reduced during removal sale. Boy's Waists, wath suits, suits and knes pants, straw bats, Men's dress shirts white and colored, summer vests, drees and work gloves, odd pants and suits, all going at Re moval Prices. Men's $1 00 muslin nigbt gowns now 80c. Men's $1.25 twilled nigbt gowns now 90c. All our Men' Linen Collars 10c each. Heavy Turkish Bath Towels 24x48 inch, 50c grades 30c each. 18x36 inch, 20c grades at 12jc each. Bed Spreads, Sheets, Pillow Covers, Lace Curtains, Scrims and Nettings, all included in Removal Sale. Grocery Removal Specials Yellow Band Milk. 3 can for I .25 Log Cabin Maple Syrup, gallons 1.45 Catsup, pints 20 Catsup, pints, high grade .' .25 Columbia Oat Flakes per package 35 Diamond W Olives, 40c grade 80 Choice Dried Italian Prunes $ .09 j Royal Savon Soap, 7 bars for 25 Large Cluster Raining, package .15 10 pound pail Fruit Jellies 80 K. C. Baking Powder. 25 oi 20 Diamond W Olives, 60c grade .40 SHOE DEPARTMENT REMOVALS Every pair Men's, Women's and Children's Oxfords; Every pair Men's or Women's Tan Dress Shoes; all canvas and white shoes are included in this Special Sale. Make your selections early while we have the size. Collins W. Elkins PRINEVILLE, .... OREGON