NOW READY ! The New Milwaukee Chain Drive and CHAMPION DRAW CUT MOWERS Champion and Milwaukee Hay Rakes New Milwaukee Binders Champion Headers Oils of all kinds. Oil Cans. Rope and Cable. Wrenches. Hay Forks, and all Other Hay Time Tools Special Prices on Groceries! This Store will close at 10 a. m. Fourth of July morning. Everybody Celebrate the Day COLLINS W. ELKINS This store will close at 10 a. m. Fourth of July morning. Everybody Celebrate the Day LOCAL MENTION. James Wood of Ash wood was in town this week. Champ Smith and wife are home from the metropolis. P. H. Pointer of Paulina ' was a business visitor Tuesday. -Mrs. bweek of Canyon Uty is visiting her sister, Mrs. Warren Crooks. Joe Prater, being sick, his father did not go to Portland, as he had planned. The deal for the MacPherson place at Trout creek has been closed. Mr. Bettis of Hillsboro is the pur chaser. The price was $40,000. There will be regular services at the Presbyterian church next Sab bath. You are invited to attend and worship with us. M. A. Prater, pastor. A purse containing a small sum of money was picked up on the street the other day and left at the Journal office. Owner may have same by identifying property. Miss Agnes Elliott returned Sat urday night to her home in Prine ville for the summer vacation. Miss Elliott has been attending the Uni versity of Oregon for the past three years. Mr. and Mrs. L. Gerlinger, of Portland, were in Prineville the first of the week. They are touring the country in their private car. Mr. Gerlinger says the country looks LOCAL MENTION Born, June 21st, to the wife of Frank Foster, a girl. Mrs. Vic Kundret, of Portland, is visiting relatives in Prineville. Mrs. J. H. Templeton has re turned from her visit to the Wil lamette vallev. Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Powell have returned from their visit to the Willamette valley. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wigle of Echo are here on a visit to Mr. Wigle's father and mother. Mrs. F. B. Shirley and daughter from Nashville, Tenn., is visiting her son in Prineville. Mrs. H. G. Davis has gone to Seattle and Vancouver, B. C, on a visit. She will be away until fall. Forest Supervisor Ross' bug camp struck tent last Thursday. Over 13,000 trees in the Ochoco national forest were cut or treated for the destructive scale. Those that were cut down were destroyed by fire. Between fifty and sixty men have been engaged for several weeks on the job. A WOMAN AND A CHECK. LOCAL MENTION j Cattle Market Stronger Mr. Black W.i Not Absolutely H.lp. lot In Money Mature. Pome few persons mill cherish the Idea that all women are absolutely helpless in business nmtters and that they are so larking In Unamlal ability that they cauuot saMy be trusted to handle money. Mr. Black belonged to this class. He better every time he goes through! bo In the ho Wtnf paying sll th. t I household bills at the end of earn It. Mrs. Michel reports that she saw some of the finest strawberrirs she ever beheld at the Hopper ranch in the Powell Butte country Sunday. The vines were simply loaded down, she says. The berries are very large, of excellent flavor and hard of flesh. At the Baptist Church Sunday, Sabbath school, 10 a. m., preaching service 11 a. m., subject, "The Lost Christ, or Journeying without Je sus." Special patriotic service by the B. Y. P. U. & P. M. Speeial music and patriotic service at 8 p. m., theme "Higher Patriotism." Arthur Hodges writes to relatives in Prineville that he has been com pletely vindicated in his impeach ment case. The business men of Boise furnished him with the best legal talent in the state free of ! wlth lt?" month, and his wife, though allowed unlimited credit, had never had an al lowance. One day the Blacks hap pened to be passing the comparatively new building in which the bank was situated. "Do you know. John." remarked Sirs. Blark, "1 have actually never been inside the bank since it was built more than two years ago?" "You haven't!" exclaimed John. "If that's the case I guess I'd better give you a check this month and let you pay the bills. Do you think you'd know how to cash it?" Mrs Black received the check, which, by the way, happened to be an unusually large one that month. That evening Mr. Black asked, not without sarcasm, if she had succeeded In indorsing It properly. "Oh. yes!" returned Mrs. Black cheerfully. "Dow many bills did you pay?" "None. It seemed a pity to waste all that money paying bills." 'Then what In the world did yon do charge. He has been receiving congratulations from all over the country on his acquittal. The pro ceedings were the outgrowth of a factional fight in the Idaho capital. Judge Springer and bride arrived in Prineville yesterday. The Dalles Chronicle, in speaking of the wed ding says: Mrs. Springer is well known in The Dalles, having been raised at Fifteen Mile and a resi dent of the city for nearly 30 years. She is a charter member of the Christian church and has identified herself with active Christian work for years, he holds the record of being a Bible school teacher for 21 years. A host of friends in The Dalles are sorry to have her leave and wish her joy and happiness in her new home. Oh," returned the little woman se renely, "I Juit deposited It In my name and opened an account of my own with It!" Setting Her Right On one of the corners of a busy thoroughfare sat an old man blind and minus one leg. A sympathetic lady who was passing stopped and gazed at him in pity. Finally she approached him and be gan asking him questions. She asked him if be were married, how many children be had. where he had worked last, how he bad met with the accident thut had Incapacitated him for work and a thousand other questions. Finally the unfortunate one became peevish. ".Madam." he exclaimed harsh ly, "you may think this is an infor mation bureau. It Is not. It Is a collecting agency." Cincinnati Com mercial Tribune. Born, June ;td, to the wife of D. P. Adamson, a girl Mrs. Carey Foster, loft Tuesday to visit her mother at Walla Walla. Mrs. Simpson, wife of the man ager of the Dos Chutes Power Co., is here on a visit. I'pper McKay is to erect a now s.'hool building during the summer months. There will lie preaching at the Johnson Crook school house, Sunday at 3:.'!0 p. m. Ed. Pengra, of Roseburg, a neph ew of S. Stearns, is here on a visit for a few days. Mrs. Frank O'Connor, of Junction City, is visiting her father, I. W. Ward, of Prineville. Mrs. Robert Zevely and family left yesterday for a week's visit to the Demares family on Upper Mc Kay. Mrs. J. W. Carlson and children left Saturday for Sand Point, Idaho, to visit her sister, Mrs. Krebs, for several weeks. L. Kamstra, the jeweler, publish es "A Hint to Byers" on the secoud page of this issue. Better read it. It will interest you. Wm. A. Dalziol, deputy commis s'oner and factory insjwctor, passed through Prineville Tuesday on his way to the district east of us. Miss Stratira Biggs, Mrs. T. N Balfour and M. It. Biggs, left Mon day for the Biggs ranch on Deep Creek for an outing of a week or ten days. W. A. Damnoy and wife of Howard were in town Monday. They were accompanied by Mrs. H. Miller of Seattle who had been to Howard on a visit. Thomas C. Finnigan, traveling representative of the Portland Jour nal, is rustling subscribers for his paper in Prineville this week. The new train schedule that went into effect Sunday gives the Journal about twelve hours the best of the Oregonian in this field. Finnegan is working it to a frazzle. j June '20, UH.l KcoeipU for i Inn wook huvo boon: Cat I to, jll.t'i; calves, IT.".; hogs. LW"; jshtvp. lll- j Market steady to stronger this wook liost jrruss steers sold in bulk f- LT) with an occasion al good loud at $S 50. Outlet is somewhat limited but receipts, have not boon largo enough to come to a glut, (iood cows and heifers were not offering freely, but one bunch of cows brought $7, the remainder being poor q utility. Prime light veal calves ut f'.K" featured. A steudy to higher hog trade. Reaction In prict'8 set In early Monday morning. Tops quickly reached f S 2.". H.:tO, ?S 35 and finally $140. Thursday market firm at $S 40. Continued light receipts would strengthen il still further. Sheep house druggy. Prime yearlinfs failed to sell better than f'; ewes ?l 50 and lambs $0.50 and $0 75. Much thin stuff is coming in this year and buyers are not anxious for any but good fat mutton and lambs. Real Estate Transfers IxMiied Weekly by t lit J. II. Ilnnor Abstract Company. Wanted. Fishermen to call at Kamstra's store for that particular Rod, Line, Leader or Hook. Largest selection. 615 8IX 8ENTENCE 8ERMON8. God U the highest good. Plato. What the pilot Is In a ship, what driver Is In a chariot, what a conductor Is In a choir, what law Is In a state and what a general Is In an army, God Is In the world. Aristotle. God is with thee, within thee. So 1 say, Lucllus, that the priest sits Inside our souls. We carry him about, and be leads us. There Is no good man without God. Seneca. We hare in our minds a cer tain inborn knowledge of God. Cicero. Know ye not that your bodies are temples of God? St Paul. God Is within us. We move by bis movement Ovid. Purse Lost Thursday, May 22, between Grizzly and Prineville, contents 50 in bills and a check lor $21.74. Liberal reward. Return to Journal or Grizzly I'ostoffice. 6 2D4tp C. W. I'ai.mkhn. Aill M. Jolly to Allen U Wl). llama, I lie, 1 ll-lil. JTul. ' W. Julian (inlliriiltli to Thou. II. ' Purvey, 1 1 no, 17 li II, fl.rtuo. I The Mlowlnir patelita were IxHiietl , l"V the I'tllteil Matj-a : I Hugh IVckhitui, i He, D U I I. ! Alexander Huxlie.v, lie no JU, nv aw, i w'j . 311:1 1.1. j I .ii w renco I'. Keating, no ho 111, n) aw, e aw, 11 11H. J (.eona Garrett, at lie, nl, ne, lie no, ,22-U.lti. I John I.. Parwlif hi, m aw, iw m, i) :bo. 4 ir :-i. John II. I'ruett, t'i ne, i tie. H i 2 Hi ! I'.llialH'tli I'r.ilmt. no 2i 15 l.V ! .Superior Nlimrlu ami Columbia ; Uaimea 17.50 to Id. Sold on III. j tttiilltneut plan. It will pay you to liiveMllirati' It von nn In the market (or a ItniiKc. J. K. Ntkwamt & Co. A 1 j New I limit Sewing Mai-hiiia for rent. Popular prirea. At KmiiatrnV "i 15 June Ul-21, r.lKl. I'. D. Parker to Goo. Ilurran, ho 17-12-13, 17,000. State to lteiij. I". Horning nw hw :I0 lti-15. 2(u. Kdwanl 10. Morolaiul to John I). McGliithern, no no, .'15 17 II, 111). Anton Votrol to Al Cubit, J ho 1(1, ii J ne, 30-11 16, ?1. C. I). Kliler to Adam Mueller, undi vided hall lute rent In ni SM IT-19, $10. Lawrence ('. Keating to Oregon Surety & ('intimity Co., lie so II), n) M W HI! HW, 11, 11, IS, $10. Farm Loans For a short time we have sub ject to our disposal $25,000 for loans on highly improved irrigated ranches in the vicin ity of Prineville. Loans to be for $5,000 or more and run from 3 to 5 years, with inter est at 8 per cent, payable an nually. ' We charge a small commission to be paid by the borrower. See R. A. BOWMAN with Central Oregon Title tfe Trust Co. 6-19 Prineville, Oregon E- W.ronar II. Z. CtilOlh Central Oregon Well Co. Contractors for Well Drilling and Prospect Holes. Depth .Guar an teed ... Daalara in full line of wall aupuliea, Carolina Enuinaa, Pump. Etc Culver, Oregon Millinery Your I lat t b always stylixh and just right if bought of Mrs. Eates, the popular Milliner. Mrs. Estes Corner 2nd and Minn Streets Prineville, Ore. For Sale. The m l ti( l att-tloll Ull, town, tthlp 11) aiiiiih, raiiKo IA oiml ol Wil lamette Meridian. About 7 lulleM mirth of rrlnevllle, Ort'Koti. ('. I-'. Hi HiivKl.t., lien, lel., OkiIi'U, I tall. Il l:' 4lp When In thti market for I, line, (' inelil and Shlnglea, m-a tha Itttliiiimd l.iiiiilwr (t I'rotluce Co. 3 27-2m . UNIVERSITY OF OREGON Summer School June 23d August 1, 1913 Twenty-five InntruetorH. Fifty cournen. Distinguished Eastern Educators added to Uvular Enmity. University Dormitories Open. Hoard and Room at 50 per week. Keducud Railroad ratfH. For Complete IlluHtruted Catalogue, Addrexs 6-21I-4 THE KEGISTIIAU, Univernity of 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 lesort 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, - - . Oregon