THE IMPORTED PERCHERON STALLION Ul?. 9& Professional Cards. NEW ZEALAND'S REPLY TO PESSIMISM The American Circus , Br ALLAN L BENSON, Aatkar at Sacialita MU Maia. TURGOT Ortyom. No. 56041 Foaled May 11, 1900; Bred by M. Vallie, Department ' of Ore n, France; Imported April 12, 1905; Property of THE LAMONTA PERCHERON HORSE m CO.W rn Will Make the Season of 1 90G as follows- At Chas. Lott's ranch, one and one-half Wo jjjj miles west of Lainonta; at Henry Montgomery's near Grizzly P. 0. and at Prineville Jj $ SEASON BEGINS APRIL FIRST rl ' DESCRIPTION i Hi ft. S3iSgs DESCRIPTION Turgot, is a very Large, Heavy Horse, Jet Mack, with tine form and superior action; and comes from a long list of Mack Percherons: Weight '2000 pounds more or less according to condition. 93 ADDRESS: fa L. P. H. Co. ra ., LAMONTA, OREGON gj vi IfimiMnoo fcll Tin a when mare is known to le With foal; H'2" d t IIOIIl OIU'V.' iiiv ......... foal sucks; also' payable" if mare is disposed of, or permanently removed from the County; Single service $10 due at time of service. Mares from a distance will be well cared for at cost of feed only, but will not assume responsibility in case of accident. Mi;gan Cha, Lott JERRY ACHEY, President Director: I Henry Montgomery 1 Oscar Cox, Samuel Pierce Wm. Sann, Walter Messinger s , J. S. McMEEN, Sec. and Treas. ?o Cxtra Charge IT WON'T cost you anxtr;t cent to have your printed matter handled in Out-of-the-rut,- When-you-want-it,, and As-yon-like-it Stylo, if we are permitted to do the work. We give both dignity and a finish to your Commercial Stationery that you are not in the habit of getting elsewere. jfdded nicety with ut added eest that's the point we wish -to.. bring out. Remember it when you order. OUR HUSINKSS men find they can get better work at just as reasonable price as to go out of town for it. We have their confidence and we mean to retain it. That's the reason you can bet your last dollar when you see a good job that it came from our office. We are continually adding the latest things in type and paper. Doesn't that go to show that "We're here wilh Me goods?" Uhe , ourna 1 9 re a a mm TYPEWRITERS ' APPEAL TO YOUR SENSE AND YOUR SENSES 1 IS T TW Smith Premier is the most silent type- i . J. liv , , i ' writer on the market. I he action quiet; no shift key. Endorsed v , -f . by mechanical experts. " The Smith Premier Typewrite Syracuse, N. Y. Branch Stores' Everywhere. Co. .- ur Oh am. dmm-ds Sfteiknap dc &d wards IPnysi'ciant and iSuryttms. 3, Ortyon. JC. Sfosenberg SPhysieian and Suryron Caffs answrd pramtty day or my At Offim Sm tomrs oA of ZZmmjftmtoti'M - st mma 9mtn Strmtu. ZPrintViiiei Oregon, 0. Jfyde - SPiyjic'an and iSuryton Call Answkrku I'komiti.y Day or .Viuht Offick Onr JkKK North of Aoamson's rtKro Stork. Kf-mmiknck Oppositk MKTIKIIIIST ClU'RCH SPrinauttle, - - Ortyon I. W. SPEAR Joed Stable X and &ree Camp JVouae The itieaiie of production in New Zealand are not yet in the j.He siou of thoif who winh to work with machinery, just a the means of production were not in possesion of those who wished to wort upon the land" until the government hegan to drive out big landlords and Vest the ownership of the lands in the people themselves, through the government. And since the iroblein of aivintf his product is solely d Aa Appeal I IIm Fillipiaar, Wr W. S. MmU HarJy, Ari. a land bible where you for fifteen WHEAT HAY 25 Cts. 1II-A1) Hay ami Drain 1.A per day. Transient trat'le Boliriled. Come where you ami your teams can lie mailt- eonil'ortalile at (lie olil McFarland Stand. Prineville, Or A WARM PROPOSITION Our Hot Water Bags D. P. Adamson & Co At JUlJI A JSk. JS. rfk J!k A.'W f The plat to buy your Jiest Koasts, Steaks, Ltc. Ir at tin O. K. Meat Market Jim uai uci i in j HYDE tt M. RAE, Pitor's. Our haircultmg is up-to-date. Our shaving is comfortable. Our shop is new and clean. Henderson Building I'KIXISVIIXK. - . OllKHilN "You Filipino don't know what you are winging by not wanting to iiecome citizens of this iipiiilenf. iiiiok uitii.ir th uroilncr the riuht to use the thiim with 1 grand countrv of ours. There - I & I O - - ---o . j which the product is made, it follows that New Zealand has attained : jsllt aiiything like it under the economic iusiice onlv to the extent that she has made the land aeces- sible to the people, and fallen short of economic justice to the extent p.un- ou ou8't t" wnd a delega that she has failed to make machinery as accessible to the operatives ; t ion over to see us the land of as the land is to the farmers And this can be done only by eliminat-i ,he flvelan(1 ((f fine churches aml lug the private capitalist who is It-nt upon the acquisition of profits, i and substituting the government as a public capitalist. There is no ISO.OtK) licensed saloons; bibles, other methotl, In-cnuse economical production necessitates production . forts and (;uns. Millionaires and on a lan;e scale with much machinery. One man can run a small i pUllpersj theologians ami thieves; farm, but one man cannot make steel rails nor can he if he l,e a : ,iWrtine'!( n"n politician, hborer, own a little steel plant of -his own. Modern production re-1 . . ' ' . quires huge investments of capital in machinery and the associated ftn1 Poverty: Christians and chain labor of many men. schools and scalawags; It was the failure of New Zealand thus far to grapple with the ma-J trusts ami tramp; money and chinery question that Secretary Tregcur had in mind when, in the nijserv. nolues anij hunger; vir- lellcr we quoteil lie sail tliat "V e nave nareiy touclictl tne cringe 01 t.l-.t. Moili.il iin..iiti. if.ifitumP' .mil tli.ift '-Sin lonrr ns lliM wnte-ft vstem endures so loin as i-iiiiil nl bohls the land, machinery and means oflcan R production, so long is the bulk of our population only a collection of J cents and a bad drink of whiskey well-fed, well-clothed slaves." No one knows better than Secretary j for five cents; where we have a Treg-ar that the workers in New Zealand will not get their product j man in congress wjtri three wives, until the government takes over the ownership of the mahmery as well d , . penitentiary for as of the hind, lie and his associates in the government are laboring! . . 1 J under no misapprehension. He tells in his letter how the landlords ' having two wives; where some who owned the workingmen's homes gobbled up in increased rents all men make sausage out of their that the government obtained from the wage-workers in the form of in- j wives, and some want to get them creased wages. And although the government is now building homes j raw. where we make bologna out for workingmen he knows this will result only in a temporary benefit hor to the toilers that in the end, the decreased cost of living will reduce' ' . wanes and thus help the capitalist. Because wages are always based 1 1,11,1 u'k cows, an.l corpses out of U)on the lowest sum upon which the workers will concent to exist and the people who eat it; where we reproduce their kind. Wages always increase after the cost of living pUt a man in jail for not having increases, and go down after the cos-t of living goes tiown. .o one cn i the means of support and on tlitt worn ior less man a living una wnen uie cost in iimiijj incieast-s. nsrp must increase. On the other hand, when the cost of living decreases, some member of the great world-wide army of the unemployed is always willing to take the job of the employed man at a wage repre senting the reduced cost of living. And since capital always pays as little as possible for labor, the employed man is compelled to suffer 4 reduction of wages, or give way to the unemployed man. This explains why the municipal ownership of public utilities never improves the financial condition of workingmen a fact that has been proved not only in New Zealand, but wherever it has been tried. London has made extensive investments in public utilities, yet in no civilized part of the world is poverty so appalling as it is in London. Vet such experiments are not without their value, because they tend in cii.rouu ! ilm imlilii- tn i ml unfit, eniihl lie noeoninlished if all in dustries were owned by the people through their governments and th J imh1 great unearned sums that now go to private capitalists retained by those, who create them. Going back to New Zealand, it is plain that since the farmers and wage-workers have combined at the polls, capitalism is being hunted out of one hole into another until it has nearly reached its last hiding place. Tin; landlords having gobbled what the government was able to attain for the wage-workers in the form of increased wages, the cap italists who own the factories will now take from the wage-workers vhathe government saves them by providing them with homes. The next Rten will loL'icallv be to prevent the capitalists who own the fac lories from committing the latest robbery, and this can be done only by depriving the capitalists of paying any wages at all, which means the government ownership of the factories, and all other means of produc tion. That will be Socialism. And all indications point to the conclusion mat me government 01 New Zealand will not be long in taking this last final step toward the emancipation of those who toil. What then, is the answer that New Zealand gives to those American citizens who, conceding the high ideals of Socialism, nevertheless con tend that it is hardly worth while to advocate' it or to vote for it he cause it ",cannot-be"attained at all in less Uian a thousand years" and who look forward to no material change in existing conditions during the life time of anyone now living because "the world always moves slowly?" Has it. been "worth while" for the farmers and wage-workers to unite at the ballot box to transform the colony in 15 years from a poverty stricken group of islands into the most prosperous country on earth?' Although New Zealand's task is well on toward completion, the bulk of the benefits that are in store for her will not come until she takes over the ownership of the factoiies as well as of the land, which she will surely do (hiring the next few years, lint even if nothing more were to he done, is what she has already obtained worth having? Think nf what the lieonle o f New Zealand have in comparison with what we have in the United States! This is the nuts it in "The Storv of New Zealand:" 1 United States. Thoroughbred Plymouth Rocks A7 if" My chicken are the product of 7 yeara of painstaking attention. They are high bred and auperior to the average. Egg $1.00 per letting. JOHN GEIGER, Prineville, - Oregon. CATARRH Nominations by machine. Government by party. Spoils system. Political corruption. Monopoly pressure to control government. Concentration of wealth. Dollar the king. Government loans to banks. Unjust discrimination in freight No discrimination rates. Railroads and telegraphs for private profit. Organization of capital in the lead. Frequent and costly t-trikes and lockouts. Industrial conflicts; disputed of labor and capital settled by battle. 10-hour day. Contractor system in public works. Taxation for revenue. Farmers and workingmen divit ed at the ballot box. ' Monopolists and politician in control. rock pile for asking for a job of work; where we license bawdy houses and fine men for preaching I Christ on the street corners; where we have a congress of 400 men who make laws, and asupreme court of nine men who set them aside; where good whiskey makes bad men and brid men make good whiskey; where newspapers are paid for suppressing the truthund rich for teaching a lie; where professors draw their con victions from the same place they do their salaries; where preachers are paid ,.$25,000 a year to dodge the devil and tickle the ?ears of the wealthy; where business con sists of getting bold of property in any way that won't land you in the penitentiary; where trusts 'hold up' and poverty 'holds down'; where men vote for what they do not want forj.fear they will get what they do want by voting for it. Where 'niggers' can vote and women can't; where a girlwho goes wrong is made an outcast and her male partner flourishes as a gentleman,) where women wear false hair and men 'dock' their horses' tails; where the political wire-puller has dis placed the ritriotic statesman; where men vote for a thing one day and cuss it 8(i4 days; where we have prayers on the floor of our National Capitol and whiskey in the cellar; where we spend $500 to bury a statesman who is rich and 10 to put away a working wav V rot. I'arsons man wno is poor; wnere io oe virtu ous is to be lonesome, and to be honest is to be a crank; where we sit on the safety-valve of 'energy and pull wide open the throttle of conscience; where gold is sub substance the one thing sought for; where we pay $15,000 for a dog and fifteen cents a dozen to a poor woman for making shirts; where we teach the 'untutored' Indian eternal life from the bible Railroads and telegraphs for pub-' and kill him off with bad whiskey; lie use. i where we put a man in jail for Organization ot men in the lead. stealing congress New Zealand. Nominations by petition. Government by the people. Merit system. No political corruption. Government pressure to control monopoly. Diffusion of wealth. Manhood the king. Goviy nnient loans to farmers. No 'strikes or lockouts. Industrial peace; disputes of labor and capital settled by judicial decision. H-hour day. Direct employment and co-operative methods. Taxation for the public, good. Farmers and workingmen united at the hallu.hox. The common people in control. a loaf of bread and in for stealing a railroad; ! where the check-book talks, sin : walks in broad daylight, justice is, ! asleep, crime runs amuck, corrup I tion permeates our whole social and political fabric, and the devil laughs from every street corner. Come to us, Filies! We've got the greatest aggregation of good i things and bad things, hot things ,and cold things, all sizes, varieties l . t . i ;i 1 ... and colors, ever exiunnen miner ........a ..Anti.iwl tl.Ml thn contrast is to our credit. No one will denv that New Zealand has many things not possessed by the j one tent. American people that are worth having. No one can deny that New j Zealand had none of these things 15 years ago and that she has ob-, . . -i .i.i - . i i :A.i ..I iU tamed them merely hecause me weaiin-proniicifs imv.- mm ..t .. r .; nat in Remember her , n(.r; the public ownership of public, registration hooks ior pminuy ballot box to get them. Is it not therefore worth whi.e to prolit ly . . i . i . i ... i...,. i. .. ..I,..., experience to avoid nor misiaKes ami to emulate nn msiK'un greatest The Smith Premier Typewriter Con 247 Stark Street, Portland, Oregon Ely's Cream Balm This Remedy la a Specific, Sure to Cive Satisfaction. CIVEB RELIEF AT ONCE. It cleanses, soothes, heals, and protects the disea'd membrane. It cttri-s Catarrh and drives away a Cold in the Head quirklv. it-stores the Senses of Taste and BmflL 1 jisy to ns. Contains no injurious drug. Applied into the nostril and absorbed. I Ijirse Size, 50 eenta at Druspsts or by , rnuil ; Trial Size, 10 cenU by mail. ! ELY BROTHERS, 56 Wirrn St., Nsw York in mt like was m exiiecting the l utilities to improve the financial condition t the worKing tiass. nllt election closes' April 10. spent '20 years trying to find prosperity along this line and brought, oWtion April "0 ), . .....if ... ti... l,.ut ,l,.,,tl, nf novcrtv. She made herself the most iim.iry Miction April -w. prosperous country in the world when she began t. place the means of i.w.ito,. ;,, il. li.ni.U of lb.- iieonle. Her prosperity has increased l in exact proportion to the extent that she has substituted public eap I ital for private capital in industry. ! Let not the future historian record the sorry fact that the nation that first established the economic equality of its citizens refused to j establish their economic equality. American citizens, with their won-1 j dciful genius for creation and organization can, if given the oppor tunity, make the material successes of New Zealand look poor indeed. ! The little colony that is showing the world the way has wrought her i victories out of rocky islands, comparatively barren of natural re sources. We have the greatest natural resources in the world. ! The pessimist is wrong. It is worth while to try to do something for ourselves and to do it now. And we should proceed to our task with the slogan ringing in our ears that Secretary Trcgear enunciated in lS'.Iti, when he took charge of the N'ew Zealand Department of Labor: i iw. u.-.i(r,..i,!i t-i r Ik the master of t .ho waL'e-earner: the landholder is the master of the landless; and the owner of the machinery is the ownef of the machinist." Registration books again opened April 25 and closes May 1". Last day for filing names for state and district ollices March :(). Last day for filing names for county ollices April 4. Canvassing votes for nominat ing state and district candidates May 5. Last day for tiling nominating petitions for county offices May 11). Last day for tiling certificates of nomination May .. General election June 4.