About Our "June White Goods Sale" Keai "June, the Month of Brides and Roses, the Fairest Month of Twelve VeCelebrate Saturday of this Week Finds all White Goods in Our Store REDUCED ! A PARTIAL LIST: Men's SPECIAL $1.50 White B. T. Buckskin Glove at $1.35 Sale Begins Saturday at Our New Location Good Roads Movement W. F. King and Oscar Hyde were the Prineville representatives of the Crook County Good Roads Associ ation that made a trip last week over the east and west line of the j proposed county highway that will form a link in the good roads move- j ment of state and nation. Thej other members of the party were j President Lynch of Redmond. Vice president McKay of Bend, Secre tary King, Commissioner Bayley, John Steid) and H. C. Dlis. The road will be taken up at the Crook county line on the McKenzie ! lava beds, thence to Sisters, from Sixers to Cline Falls, then to Red mond, from Redmond to Prineville and on up Crooked river by way of Paulina ti the mouth of Buck creek, and from there southeast to! Dick Darling and Frank Foster the Bend-Burns road at the east j were taken up to Mill creek Sun Crook county line. Travelers on j day by Wistar Rosenberg and the east and west road have the!Luckey Bonney in Dr. Rosen option at Cline Falls of going south berg's car. The two first named to Bend on the north and south went fishing, while the boys road and thence east on the Bend- Burns road, the distance being about the same as over the Paulina route. The contemplated north and south road starts from Schultz place on Trout creek and thence to -Madras, from Madras it goes to Metolius, thence to Prineville, Red-! mond, Cline Falls, Laidlaw, Bend, ' La Pine and Crescent. The local officials did not go over the north I and south road. A great deal of j interest was manifested in all the towns visited on the east and west trip. The party was banquetted at Bend and every courtesy wa3 shown all along the route. In all about 358 miles of roads in Crook county will come in for betterment under the new good roads law passed by the last legislature. Wedding at Grizzly. A very pretty wedding and one of interest to a friends was that large circle of ', of Miss Edith Hamilton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. j L. H. Hamilton of Grizzly, and ! Clyde Moore of Lamonta. The wedding took place at the home of the bride's sister, Mrs. Ernest Mc Kenzie of Grizzly, Sunday, June 8. Rev. Geo. Eads of Culver officiated. Only relatives of the bride and groom and a few intimate friends were present. After the ceremony j a dainty luncheon wa3 served in the I dining room. J The bride was becomingly gowned in white embroidered voile and wore a wreath of orange blossoms. j The couple were the recipients of many and useful gifts. -Mr. and Mrs. Moore will be at home after June 15th at Moore ' fc. U S. , " " j Wool Sales Day at Redmond. June 24 Brm, vorw. to ,,,., .., , I Union Warehouse Co. J.arge Htoue warehouse, low liiHiirunce rates, low shrinkage. Free use of Kheiirtng cor rals. 6 d-2t, Superior Niagrla ami Columbia Ranges J".50 to 65. Sold on In stallment plan. It will pay you to investigate If you are iu the market lor a Runae j. K. Sti;wakt & Co. 5-1 All white goods, either silk, cotton or wool, including mus lin and sheeting. , All white lingerie or tailored waists and dresses, All white petticoats, corsets, underwear, hosiery, handkerPs. All white aprons, ribbons, laces and embroideries, table linens, napkins, sheets, pillow cases and blankets. All white bedspreads, bath and huck towels, draperies, and our entire stock of lace curtains. COLLINS W. ELKINS LOCAL MENTION Mrs. E. N. Hawthorn was a Prineville visitor Wednesday. H. J. Healy and wife of Culver were business visitors Tuesday. Deputy District Attorney Wirtz left Sunday for a trip to Forest Grove. Messrs. H. C. Oliver and L. M. Foss. of the O.-W. R. & X. Co.. were Prineville visitors Unlay. L. A. Dudley, bookkeeper at the First Xational Bank, has resigned and left for his home in Portland yesterday The Boys Had Long Hike a Home stood guard over the car, and when the thunder storm came up :in the atternoon the boys grew frightened, cranked up the en gine and p'oceeded to town with all possible dispatch. Result: j Messrs. Darling and Foster had to walk the whole eleven miles to town in a blinding rain and tho ground sloppy under foot. It took them three hours to make the trip, but both were in a good humor upon arrival. Revisiting Old Scenes Mr. and Mr3. R. M. Johnston and son, Omar, of Colfax, Wash., ar rived in Prineville Monday to place a monument over the grave of their little baby that was buried in Prine ville 39 years ago. Mr. Johnston confessed that he was disappointed in the looks of this country. "With your natural resources your country should be far ahead of what it is," said he. -Tpon being reminded that Prine- ville as yet had no railroad and that tne country had enjoyed the bene- fits of one only a few years, Mr. Johnston concluded that progress was slow in any country without modern transportation. Since leaving Prineville in 1875 Mr. Johnston has accumulated a competency and is now enjoying the fruits of his industry. During his shrt stay of a couple of days Mr. Johnston was busy hunting up old friends. Many had passed away but there were a few left. When he lived here the vigilantes held forth, he says, and life and property were not very secure, but now all is changed, Fre.h Fruit and Strawberries Ht Mr. VVrliilit'H Confectionery Store. lee Cream and Sudan. 5-15 wic. i -n 7dj j t Wol Sales Day at Redraond.June Bring your wool to the Redmond I "Ion Warelioune Cn. Lnrire stone warehouse, low Insurance rates, low shrinkage, Free use of sliearlnir cor-r"lrt- 6 5-2t Wanted. Fishermen to call at Kamstra's etore for that particular Rod, Line, Leader or Hook. Largest selection. 5 15 LOCAL MENTION Johnny Cyrus is visiting his grandparonss at Sisters. Mrs. Horsell. who has Ut-n very sick, is a little letter today. The Prineville public schools will j begin the fall term Septemlier l.". : Teachers' examinations will com-j mence Wednesday, June Is, jn Prineville. Mrs. J. J. Schaefer of Kent, a sister of Mrs. J. W. Boone, is here on a visit. The date of the Redmond wool sales has been changed to June 24th instead of July t'th. Mrs. Cyrus, Mrs. Minger and Alma Lippman left Sunday to spend a week at the Rose Festival. D. II. Smyth of the 0. A. C. ami Thos. Hutum of F.gli, Oregon, passed through I'rineville Monday, Attorney Wallace returned the first of the week from a trip to The Dalles and Portland on legal busi ness. There is a big school fight on at The Dalles and Mrs. W. A. Bell is in it with both feet. Mrs Bell was a school director in Prineville sev eral years ago. W. C. Levens of Burns bought a fine pure-bred registered 2-year-old Red Polled Angus bull from Dick son & McDowell Monday. This ranch has one of the lxst herds in the state. Prof. E. E. Evans, of the Crook County High School, left yesterday to join his wife at Albion, Mich., where he will sjiend his vacation Mrs Evans will return with him in the early part of September. Dr. MacFadden and wife left Tuesday for Denver, where they will make their future home. Mrs. MacFadden expects to go through to Chicago to visit her parents be fore taking up her permanent resi dence in the Colorado capital. 0. F. Wallenburg, of Grizzly mangled his right hand Monday at his sawmill. He may or may not lose a couple of fingers. Dr. Rosen berg thinks he can save one but is not so sure about the other. He will have to graft in a piece of bone to do it. The Pioneer Tel. & Tel. Co. is busy installing a new metallic line between Prineville and Redmond. i It will be a week or such a matter j before it will be in operation. Then will follow the gradual substitution j of the old for the new all over the I entire system. This will place the j Pioneer service on a par with the best furnished anywhere. I At the Methodist church the pas i tor will preach both morning and evening next Sunday. All those j who are contemplating matrimony, j old maids, bachelors, and those who ! enjoy the bliss of married life, should enjoy the morning sermon. I Evening subject, "A Xew Crea 1 ture." The choir will render some i choice music at each service. The sermons will be short and to the point. Please, neighbor, get the habit of church attendance. John E. Williams, paster. Entire Millinery Stock. Shoe Department. All white shoes, pumps and slippers. All men's white straw hats, handkerchiefs, collars, shirts, neckwear and underwear In the grocery department: All white dishes, white enam eled ware and all glassware. ! LOCAL MENTION Judge Springer will be out of I town for a week or ten days. i ! V. Carmiohm-I of I.a Pine was! registered at the Prineville Tuesday. 1 Mr. French, of the French Drug' Co., is in Portland on business this week. The M isses Stearns are Working ! in the county clerk's office during the absence of Deputy Buttles. ' W. li. Morse, of Ijimonta. nnd , Kotx-rt Cram, of Trout Creek, were j business visitors to I'rineville, Sat- unlay. 1 Miss Mary Jones of Hillsboro, a ' sister of Dale Jones, is visiting in Prineville. She will send the sum-J mer here- j Married June 9. at the M. E. parsonage, Curt Wilson nnd Miss Delia RoU-rLson, Irnth of Dry creek. Rev. Williams ierformed the cere mony. Mr. and Mrs. William Combs left today for Orenco, Oregon, where they will make their home. Mr. Combs has bought a place adjoin ing the town. There will lie preaching at the Johnson creek sehoolhouso Sunday at 3 p. m. by Rev. John E. Williams. , The Sunday School recently organ ized will meet at 2 o'clock. Cecil and Harry Stearns returned from Iji Pine, in the upper Des chutes country, Monday. They shipped two Herford bulls from Bend to the Mary Hill Stock Farm, Wash. Carey will remain at La Pine for a month or so. ! A. W. Battles and I). II. Peoples left today for Iowa- The boys avowed their intention of returnirg with soul-mates a month later but I We don't believe it as both have, their affections well anchored in this part of the United States. Mr. and Mrs. Palmer Ayres of Eugene, cousins of Mrs. S. S. Stearns and uncle and aunt of Wm. Ayres of this place, were Prineville visitors the past week. They will visit relatives in Walla Walla, Day ton and Farmington, Wash., before going home. Baptist church Sunday School at 10 a.m. Preaching at 11 a. m. Theme, "To Every Man His Work." The Baptist Young People will render "The Pink Rose" in story and song at 8 p. m. The public is cordially invited. John McAllister, pastor. Walter O'Xeil and family left the first of the week for their new home at Hillsboro. Mr. O'Neil has sold his town property to W. T. Kerr who will move in from the Lone Pine ranch next fall for school. Mr. Kerr also bought the half inter est of Mr. Thornburn in the Lone Pine property. R. 13. Miller, traffic manager of the O.-W. R. & N. Co., L. M. Foss, traveling freight and passenger agent, and Farmer Smith, the agri cultural expert of the same com pany, were in Prineville Friday looking over this territory. Mr. Foss will take up the work of E. J.Wilson I who resigned to become assistant' cashier of the Crook County Bank. I LOCAL MENTION. Miss Maggie Gla.e left Sunday for a week at the Rose Festival. J. W. Brady, the Tacoma limsc buyer, was. in town Tuesday . Miss l-atira Houston leaves today for her homo at Bear creek for a vUit with relatives. Mrs. Pearl Oshorn, who has been visiting the family of Isom Cleek for the past month, left for her home at Madras Sunday. Engineers von Planta and C O. Mantles, of the Prineville. Me'olius roalleft for Portland today. The surveys have been completed. Tin data will lie worked out in Portland and submitted to Contractor Scheel. E- Wgan.r H. Z. Griffith Central Oregon Well Co. Contractors for Well Drilling and Prospect Holes. Depth .Guar anteed ... De.Urt in lull tin of well lupuliet, Gaolin Entftn, Pumpt, Etc. Culver, Oregon UNIVERSITY Summer School Twenty-five Instructors. Fifty courses. lintiiif(uishid F.UKtern Educators added to lingular Faculty, University Dormitories Open. Hoard and Koom at $.'! 50 per week, Kedueed Ilailroiul rates. For Complete Illustrated Catalogue, Addrens 5-2i)-4 THE KEtilSTUAR, University ol Oregon, Eugene The "Story of the Cadillac," is one of that mechanical and commercial advancement which makes for permanency. The Cadillac Company has never yielded to clamor by producing that which catered merely to fancy, nor that which took advantage of the uninformed. On the contrary it has produced only that which it knew would give to the purchaser "value received" in abundant measure. The Cadillac Company has never been obliged to resort to exaggeration and over-drawn claims to dispose of all the cars that it could make and more. Its policy has ever been to under-claim rather than over-claim. It is gratified that the public accepts its representations at their full worth; because the public has never been misled and because the public could always expect and has always received more than was offered. THE W. F. KING COMPANY DISTRIBUTORS Prineville, Paint SPECIAL To introduce our extra quality white "New Era" House Paint. See our Paint Man Terms Cash Regular Customers, Thirty Days Millinery Your I lat i nlwnys stylish nnd just unlit if bought of Mrs. Estca, the popular Milliner. Mrs. Estes Corner 2ml nnd Main Streets Prineville, Ore. Bids Wanted. illds are wanted fur n new In dustrial tiulldluir fur the Crunk ('utility 1 1 lull School. i'laiis mill svlilctit Ions will lie im-ii fur In- N..vtloii lit (he tilll it the ( utility Scltnul Siiiicrlnteiideiit lit the i-otirt-hutise. I'rlui'Vllli', Friday, June II. Hiils will Is' um'iiim Ttii'sda.r, June 17, at 10 a. in. The rlulil Is reserved tu ri'l-H-t any or all 1. 1. Is. 11 12 J. K. Mykiim, Secretary. OF OREGON June 23d August 1, 1913 Oregon V