NEW FALL FITTINGS Every department of our big store says "Ready! The first are the best selec tions. Quality our aim. irschbaum Cloihes Up-to-Date Millinery Come to Our Parlors and Get a New Hat BEAVERS VELVETS FELTS and made shapes, trimmed with plumes, boas stickups or in combination. Splendid milliner and designer in charge who will show you dozens of charming hats. Our Implement Line New Kentucky Drills Oliver Chilled Steel Plows John Deere Plows Page Steel Wire Fence Ladies' New Fall Coats The Best From Many Lines Sweaters Mackinaws New Waists New Dress Goods Everything for Women and Children Boy's Knee Pant Suits Several special lines on which we can save you money SHOES Tell our shoe man what you want of a shoe and he will find that shoe for you. Most complete shoe store in town. Special shoe fitter in charge. New Suits & Overcoats FOR MEN Furnishings and Footwear from the most reliable makers. Everything for fall and winter use. SEE US SOON ! C. W. ELKINS Good Fruit Crop This Season LOCAL MENTION Mrs. Fred Bishop left yesterday for Portland. lhe fruit crop this year m Lrook Born September 13. to the wife county has not been a failure by 0f Trapman, a girl. Sylvian Michel returned Tuesday from his trip to Pendleton. Born September 14, to the wife short of the bumper yield of last season, but plums, prunes, apricots, crab apples, etc. will be a good crop. At the Gibson ranch, nine miles north of Prineville, the lessee, F. F. Bowlin, says that while his apple crop will not be as large as last year it is of better flavor and brings a higher price. His trees are pretty well loaded. His plums, of Chas. Klann, near Madras, a son. Born September 15, to the wife of Don Arnesmeier, near Metolius. a son. Workmen are putting in a plate glass front in the Adams and Jordan stores. Miss Beulah Crooks left Tuesday crabs, prunes, apricots, etc. have ' evening for a visit at the Baldwin to be propped up to save the trees. I lodge at The Tules. At the Williams place there is a good crop of everything except apples. William Pitcher, on the McKay, has a good crop of apples, pears, plums, apricots and crab apples. The fruit crop is good in the Powell Butte country. The apple crop is not so heavy this year as last but that is owing to (he un usually heavy yield last season. Peaches, plums, pears, cherries, apricots, etc. are fully up to the Powell Butte standard. Council Awards Sidewalk Contract The city council awarded the cement sidewalk contract to Wheel wright & Phipps Saturday evening. The re-advertising for bids saved the city at least 11400. "As a matter of fact," said Mayor Clifton, "it was City Engineer Kelley that made the saving." Six blocks on Main street and a few other places' will have the new walks. Work is to begin right awa. Rich Powell Loses Threshing Outfit A Central Oregon tennis tourna ment will be held at Bend next Fri day, Saturday and Sunday. Miss Conway and sister, Estelle, arrived in Prineville last evening. Estelle will join the eighth grade class of the Prineville public school. The contract for 650O feet of steel flume for the feed canal of the Tumalo project has been let- So also was the lumber contract for 300,000 feet of lumber. Harold Leland Maker was married at Boston, Mass., September 10, to Melvina Eleanor Bassett. The young couple will be at home to friends at Prineville after October 1st. We have no hesitency in saying that he will Maker a good husband. J. B. Shipp was awarded the con tract this morning for remodeling the ground floor of the court house. The sheriff's office will be located there and the county jail enlarged. The improvements will cost about 12,000. W. D. Cursey, the defaulting hotel man of Bend, had a prelimi nary hearing before Justice Ken nedy last Friday. The judge bound him over to the December grand jury in the sum of $1000 which he was not able to furnish. He is boarding with the sheriff. Dr. Hyde reports a bad case of emphysemia in town. But don't Rich Powell's threshing J outfit was destroyed by fire Monday nieht sometime between 11 and 1 o'clock. 'get frightened on account of the The origin of the fire is not known. name. Its neither contagious nor It is thought a carelessly thrown infectious. A young man by the cigarette stub set fire to the build-' name of Ross is having a serious ing in which it was stored. The 'time of it with chances in favor of blacksmith shop was in the same building. Partially insured Loss about 11500. School Day at the Fair Wednesday, September 24, is School Day at the Crook County Fair. All teachers and pupils of the county are given free admis sion to the grounds on that date. The customary school parade will start from the high school building. Teachers and pupils from all dis tricts in the county are cordially in vited to participate. Be on hand at 10:30 sharp. J. E. Myers, County superintendent. recovery. Only six complaints were filed with the County Board of Equaliza tion up to Saturday last. As this was the last day for filing no more can be taken up. The kicks re ceived were on lots in towns that had no existence except on paper. At the Baptist chnrch next Sun day Sunday school, 10 a. m. Remember Sunday, the 28th is Rally Day. Theme for Sunday morning, "Scriptural Giving." B. Y. P. U. 7 p. m. Subject for 8 p. m., "A Man and the Devil." We want you at these services. We will help you. John McAllister, pastor. LOCAL MENTION John Morris is improving slowly. Mrs. Granville Clifton came in from The Tules yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wuraweiler of Sisters are visiting in town. Mrs. C. C. McNeeloy and family have moved in from the ranch. Born September It!, to the wife of A. A. McCord, on McKay, a girl. Horace Belknap will attend the medical - college at Portland this year. Mrs. Floyd Houston and family have moved into town for the school year. Ed Hodson has had his 40 h. p. V'elie repaired so that it is running I as good as ever. Mrs Frank Johnson returned from Burns last week, where she spent the summer. Mrs. Robert E. Gray, assisted by the Shumias, entertained the teach ers of Prineville Monday afternoon. Miss May Hewes of Albany ar rived in Prineville Friday. She is one of the new teachers in the Prineville school. Robert Zevely and H. D. Still returned with their families the last of the week from their trip to the mountains. Miss Myrtle Jeffries, a teacher from Dakota, arrived in Prineville last Thursday in order to be on hand at the owning of school. Mrs. R. P. Harrington, who has been visiting relatives and friends in Prineville for several weeks, left Monday for her home in Marshfield. The county court has been out inspecting the county roads. Bear creek, Bend, Summit Prairie and ths Paulina sections will be visited. Miss Alice Pratt of Post arrived in Prineville the last of the week to get settled before the opening of the Prineville public schools, of which she is a teacher. J. W. Elliott and wife leave to morrow for an extended visit to relatives and friends at Monarch, Mont. They expect to return about the first of November. The ladies of the Presbyterian church will serve a dinner in the assembly room of the church Thurs day and Friday, September 25th and 20th, from 5 to 7 p. m. The Music Club held a prelimi nary meeting Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. C. M. Elkins. Their next meeting will be held September 30, at the home of Mrs. Lakin- LOCAL MENTION for Mrs. Millicnn left yesterday the ranch at Millicnn. Prince Glaze and wife have re turned from Belknap Springs. ' Mrs L. A. Booth left for her home at The Dalles Inst Snturduy. Mr. and Mrs. Huff got back Tues day from their trip to the Round Up. The Misses ljuise and Helen Summers and Chnfles Summers loft Monday for Portland. Miss Frances Williams left Mon day for Walla Walla, where she will attend Whitman College. Miss Christabel Hubbard of Grandview, who has been holding down her homestead since school closed, is back in her classroom again. I Miss Theresa Cassidy, who has been attending a summer school at Salem, returned the last of the week to take up her labors in the Prineville schools. The Prineville visitors to the Pendleton Round-Up are drifting back. John Wigle, George Noble, Edgar Stewart and family and others report a good time. Mrs. Wm. Wigle and her sister, Mrs. Warren, left the first of the week for Boise, Idaho, where they j will visit for a time. Mrs. Wigle will spend the winter in Eugene. j The Crook County Abstract Co. has filed articles of incorporation with the county clerk. Capital ' stock 18000. The incorporators are : J. B. Bell, Mabel F. Bell, A. W. j Sims and C. M. Sims. John Stevenson, who should have j got a soul-mate at the Pendleton j Round-Up, but didn't, was chari- i varied good and plenty Tuesday evening on his return. The crowd would have it that if he were not married he should be, and kept up an awful din for some time. Warren Brown left Sunday for Portland to attend the county clerk's convention this week. The meeting was called so that the county clerks of the state could get together to reach an understanding of the new uniform accounting system that goes into effect the first of the year. Bend had a big fire last Friday night. The Patterson Drug Co. and the R. M. Smith Clothing Co. were burned out. The origin of. the fire is not known. The loss is , estimated at about 130,000 which i was well covered by insurance. Jack Summers, who is collecting The Ladies' Annex will give a i samples for the big land shows this reception at the club rooms next Monday evening for the teachers who are attending the, county in stitute. All members of the Annex and of the Commercial Club are requested to be present at 7:45 to assist in receiving and entertaining the guests. fall, reports good samples of grains and grasses grown in the Prineville country. His exhibit of oats will be especially fine. He thinks there will be nothing in the country to beat it. He will complete his list of samples from the Crook County Fair prize winners. HE HID HIS MONEY IN THE GROUND. ITS GONE IT HE HAD HIDDEN IT IN OUR BANK IT WOULD BE SAFE NOW r. Do you see this picture ? Well, this is a common occurrence. The papers contain accounts almost daily of where people lose their money by hiding it in unsafs places. If you want to HIDE your money, hide it behind our thick walls and strong locks where it will be SAFE. We refer those who have not banked with us to those who HAVE. Make OUR bank YOUR bank We pay four per cent interest on Time Deposits. CROOK COUNTY BANK, Prineville The "Story of the Cadillac," is one ol 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-chum. 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 You . would . enjoy . the . Journal Only $1.50 per Year fttj.w?-T,.:A"-w.f.'