NEW FALL FITTINGS Every department of our big store says "Ready! The first are the best selec tions. Quality our aim. irschbaum I I went Clothes 2u Aim iff 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 A Small Army Attending School Three hundred and seventeen pupils are attending school in Prine ville. There are 106 in the high school and 211 in the grades. This number is testing the capa city of the buildings. The high school especially is crowded but ar rangements are being carried out to relieve the congestion. j The girls' dormitory of the high school is about ready for use. It is thought the girls can move in the latter part of the week. By doing their own work board and room will cost them f 14 a month. In his travels around the county in search of students Supt. Baugh man of the high school found that there was an impression that a tu ition fee was charged. He wants this corrected. No charge is made for tuition. The first grade iu the public school is full to overflowing. Prin cipal Leward says that no more pu pils will be received for this grade during this term. Had a Good Time at the Rabbit Drive LOCAL MENTION W. A. Booth took in the Powell Butte rabbit drive last Sunday. He wasn't an active participant, he savs, except at the table and right there is where he did go some. Mr. Booth thinks the Powell Butte women are wonders when it comes to getting up a dinner. He had to let out three or four notches in his belt to feel comfortable on the re turn journey to Prineville. When questioned about the suc cess of the drive Mr. Booth con fessed he didn't know much about that end of it. He said that some jacks were killed and that on October 19 another drive would be held. Died. I. A. Hinckle, an old-timer in Crook county, died the 10th day of September, near Portland, aged 83 years. Mr. Hinckle ran horses in the Suplee country for thirty years. He leaves four daughters in this country Mrs. Wm. Smead of Post, Mrs. Floyd Gilchrist and Mrs. John Kuhn of Suplee, Mrs. Thos. Bren nan of Prineville. Born October 2, to the wife of Thos. Coon, a boy. Born Sept. 2, to the wife of Kobert Bland, at Grizzly, a girl. County School Superintendent Myers is visiting the schools of the county. Dance tomorrow night at Club Hall. The music will start prompt ly at 8:30. Mrs. Max Wilson left for Port land Friday, where she will join her husband who is working there. Prineville country got its first snow early Monday morning. Later in the day it changed to rain. Med Vanderpool left Saturday for a visit to relatives in The Dalles, Dufur and- Willamette val ley points. F. P. Doak, aged 37, died at The Dalles Hospital Saturday, where he was sent for treatment. He was buried here Monday. Miss Dolly Hodges has returned from Boise, .where she has been visiting her uncle, Mayor Hodges, of the Idaho capital. There will be a band concert on Main street next Sunday afternoon if the weather is favorable, other wise it will be held at the Club Hall. Concert begins at 2:30. Mrs. Pearl Kayler left for Hood 1 River Saturday, where she will represent the Shumia Literary Club j of Prineville at the convention of the Oregon Federation of Women's Clubs which meets at the Apple City this week. F. M. Hathaway leaves today for Eugene, where he will represent the j Ford Auto Co. The change to a larger field is a merited promotion j for the young man. Mr. Hathaway, by his close attention to business and uniform courtesy, has sold over ' 30 cars in Prineville and vicinity t during the past summer. The peo j pie of Eugene will find him all right. The Ladies' Annex will hold a social afternoon on Saturday, Oc- tober 18, for the purpose of meet ing the strangers in our city. Ladies who are newcomers in Prine ! ville are especially invited to come ' out and get acquainted. Every I member of the club is expected to j be present with at least one ' stranger. From 2:30 to 5 o'clock I at the Annex parlors. LOCAL MENTION H. C. Ellis was over from Bend yesterday. George Storkman is over from Lakeview shaking hands with old friends. The Ladies' Annex are to have the Turner Art Exhibit at their club parlors from Oct. 29 to Nov. 1. Jim Sears, an old stage driver well known in Prineville, died last Friday in Madras. He was buried in Prineville Saturday. H. W. Carlin of Roberts was down for supplies Friday. He has agood big kick coming, he says, on account of the bad roads. There will be a band dance at the Club Hall Friday night, October 10. Proceeds to be used to buy music for the Prineville band. Everybody come. The daily mail for the railroad will beheld open until 3 o'clock. Last week it was announced that it would close at 2:15 but this has been changed to 3 o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Rowell, who have been visiting at the home of John Morris for the past two weeks, left Sunday for their home in the Willamette valley over the Mc Kenzie pass. The Shumia Club held its second meeting October 4, at the home of ! Mrs. John Wigle. Mrs Robert E, LOCAL MENTION Horn October 4, to the wife of Harry Elliott, a girl. Jesse Yancey and family are now sojourning at Fresno, California. Mrs. Glover, daughter of Mrs. MeDaniels, left yesterday for her home in the East. J. A. Douthit of The Dalles, at one time editor of the Prineville Review, died last Monday. Heart failure was the immediate cause. He leaves many friends in Crook county. County Treasurer Jordan makes another call for warrants in this issue. Six thousand dollars' worth will tx taken up. This leaves in round numbers 113,000 outstanding! Ten thousand on the general fund and three thousand road. Gray gave a very interesting review of the first four books of Brown ing's "The Ring and the Book." Refreshments were served by the hostess. The club will meet with Miss Conway, Saturday, Oct. 11. The local Woman's Christian Temperance Union met on October 1st at the home of Mrs. Reinke, with the president, Mrs. C. I. Win nek, . in charge. A number of plans were made regarding the work for the coming year. The next meeting will be held on the 15th of the month at Mrs. Hamil ton's. Silver Lake Leader: W. I. Dish man, the cattle buyer, was in the city Tuesday evening. He recently purchased from C. W. Withers 170 head of cattle, 140 head from Wm. Kittridge, and a small bunch of Frank McBroom. He was ac companied by George Slayton of Prineville, who will take part of the cattle to that place where they will be fed before being placed on the-market. Tailoring They fed tooi' Try look nict! Tktjr f wtU vwotf Ac ate' It costs you nothing extra to have a suit made to your own measure that will fit you around the neck. Call and examine j my $15.00 suits. I G0RMLEY,theTailor Dr. Ida Behrendt New Fall Millinery Now on Display Beautiful Pattern Ilati, Nifty little Turbans, Street Hats and hats for every purpose for ladies, misses and chil dren. Tickets given with each pur chase, and a beautiful set of furs will be given absolutely free to the one holding the lucky number. Mrs. Estes MILLINERY PARLORS Prineville, Ore. The BosslGOEisi EARLY, HE BEGANfe PUTTING MONEY p i in the Bank E NOW HE'S THE B?S ritiVbVl.f: IMlUJJtiJWf Young man, if you wish to be YOUR OWN BOSS, start a bank account. Some day a business opportunity will present itself and you will have the money to take it. All big fortuces began that way. Once you start, things come easier each year. When you need it, it will bo where you can get it to grab a good business opportunity. Make OUR bank YOUR bank We pay four per cent interest on Time Deposits. CROOK COUNTY BANK, Prineville IfriKltiate Philadelphia Optical ('nllee, PhiiailHphitt. I'ii., Mccormick Oj-ttcul Col lege, Chicago, III. Manufacturing and Refracting OPTICIAN Are you Mearinir leu tea that are not tut. in factory ? If you are turnup; trouble with your eye. U will pay you to come direct to nie. I will give your eve a thoroun ami careful examination- free of eh u rye and tell you the exact condition they are in. I Fit Every Conceivable Style of Spectacles and Eye Glasses iJr. liehrendt H now introducing the late Krvntok Invinihle Bifocals ami Tunc Lens, which in without a doubt the fluent lena ever put on the market. I Parents Should not Neglect Their Children's Eyes Will he at Hotel Oregon. October 11 to 18. No longer. 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, .... Oregon You . would . enjoy . the . Journal Only $1.50 per Year