83 THE THE IMPORTED PERCHERON STALLION ffli?. (ft ft toiM fWi. SOCIALIST COLUMN diorten the hours of Will they make leistirr TURCOT jfttornfy-a t- jCm w No. 56041 Foaled May 11, 1900; Bred by M. Vallie, Department of Oren, France; Imported April 12, 1905; Property of I.AMONTA PERCHERON HORSE CO. fft Vf ?n Will Make the Season of 1 906 as Follows:' At Chas. Lott's ranch, one and one-half LM ffi miles west of Lamonta; at Henry Montgomery's near Grizzly P. 0. and at Prineville fj IS $ SEASON BEGINS APRIL FIRST 9 S3 S3iyys jfttornmy-i PrinivilU, Tilans latM.r? ; for the indgstrioU'', or will they j Invention lias tilled the world Uluke the rich richer and the poor i County Alienor Placing Willi competitors, not only of poorer? Is man involved in the: (laloiers, hut of mechanics of "general" scheme of thing? Is j Ortgon. higher skill. Today the ordinary i there no pit v, no iijcrev? ' -jl-il-orer i, for the most part, a peg j . . " allimals" llevollr ,J Weak everything at nierrv of! RAISES ASSESSMENT Higher Values on . Property dt d wards in the tireless- wheel. He works with the -he feeds the insatiable. When the monster stops, the .nun , LanJ anJ employ uient out of 8 DESCRIPTION Turcot, is a very Ianie, Heavy Horse, Jet .Black, with tine form ami superior Lf J action; and conies from a lon list of Black lVrclierons: Weight '2000 pounds more or less acconling to condition. M FEES w Insurance $'20 One when mare is known to he with foal; $25 ltie when foal sucks; also payable it mare is disposed ot, or permanently removed I nun the oiuitv: Single service $10 due at time of service. Mares from a distance will be well cared for at cost ot teed only, but will not assume responsibility m case ol accident. Directors: (N. MiHigan, Chas. Lott Henry Montgomery Oscar Cox, Samuel Pierce Wm. Sann, Walter Messinger JERRY ACHEY, President J. S. McMEEN, Sec. and Treas. ADDRESS: L. P. H. Co. LAMONTA, OREGON ftj M 3eect Stable Sa3HSHH Q BBS 9fo Cxtra Charge r WON'T cost you an extra cent to have your printed matter handled in Out-of-t he rut, Wheu-you-want-it, and As-you-like-it Style, if we are permitted to do the work. We rive both'diirnity and a finish to your Commercial Stationery that you are not in the habit of getting elsewere. jidded nicety without added cost that's the point we wish to bring out. Remember it when you order. OURJUJSINKSSnientind 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 with the goods?" Vhe journal ZPreaa SPhjfsfcimns and SrfMSt 00 Sri" SKmr mt tAmm Oregon, J, Rosenberg SPnystctan and Surgeon Caffs answered protttpty ay er ntyAt Office o ttoorm totttA of Jjjf 'm SJruf Sort. frasitjM eTir sl mmtt Wmitt Strmmt. ZPrtneviile, Ormgott. 0. JCyde SPttysict'an and $Mryon C.M.I.S SSWKRK1 I'KOMrn.V lAY OK NIGHT OKKICK ONK iMKtH NoRTll OF AlAMONH lKt" STOKK. Uks11KN'K OI'mwl'IK Mkthhhm- ClITRCH Is out of bread. Hi: thing. The niai'hine that he fed was not feeding hiui the inven tion wns not for his benefit. 'The other day I heard a man say that it was almost impossible for thousands of good mechanics to get employment, and that in Ins judgment the beak and claw and hoof and tooth. club and brain and I Breed iiieoualit v. iniusiice everv- h'as not saved anv-!k.. -ri - . .... i i:-. nfjric. i lie puui iitjupvr niaiMlill in the streets with his dray, over worked, overwhipped and under fed, when he sees other horses ffrofimeil . to mirrors oliuti'ii i nur I . ' instance with gold and silver, scorning with) ment Gf proua teet the very earth, pro- Ueputv Tax Assessor Lafollett has leeii in Madras during the week, ;itnessing the property of this neighborhood for thrt ly06 taxes. Mr. Lafollette is authority for the statement that it will be. the policy of the county tax as sessor this year, to assess the pro perty at a higher valuation than it was assessed last year. One of this is in the assess cultivated wheat lands, which last year were assessed at $4 an acre but will le assessed at bubly indulges in the usual Soc- tfnvrfimAnti:.l:.i:. . , .1? laiisuu renecuons: ana mis name e ., tone lA.f'lte.L. ! "O a 11 IUI li")U, oupiii io luriiisn ur lor me teo- worn horse, worn out and old. ' 7 !Prinvitta, Ortgon I. W. SPEAR and re'e Camp JVouae WIIHAT 11 A V 25 Cts. II HAD. lluv uml Oruin A.'ir) per day. Tntiisifat trailn soliciti'd. ('nine wiu-re you uml your teams can lie made comfortable tit the old McFarland Stand. Prineville, Or b I 3 I D. P. Adamson & Co. A WARM PROPOSITION Our Hot Water Bags (. .ifin. Jk. i&. A"Ai rikjfte jddk A.' JUM The place to buv your Host jjt Roasts, Steaks, Etc. t O. K. Meat Market 5 4 i Is at the m tvi 11YDI-: ct McllAH, Pkoc's TYPEWRITERS APPEAL TO YOUR SENSE AND YOUR SENSES The Smith Premier is the, most silent type writer on the market. The action is quiet; no shift key. Endorsed j by mechanical experts. fill Smith Premier Typewriter Co. Syracuse, i. i . Branch Stores Everywhere. !'..lfllliiiJfAf iv ' u. itt ft jtBT sjpr -ajpic jiipr Tnjymr myt mprtgt ni -ivyi Our haircutting is up-to-date. Our shaving is comfortable. Our shop is new and clean. Henderson Building lMtlSEVLLI-K, - ORKOON luJftc Jkjk..rfk A. JWJW rffc jA rfk rfk rfk Thoroughbred Plymouth Rocks tew 4 . My chickens are the product of 7 yean of painstaking attention. They are high bred and superior to the average. Eggs $1.00 per setting. JOHN GE1GER, Prineville, - Oregon. ;ATARRH pie. A few minutes later I heard another say that he was selling a patent for cutting out cloth, that one of the machines could do the the work of twenty tailors, and that only the weefc before he had sold two to a great house in New York and that over forty cutters had been discharged. On every fide men are being charged and machines are invented to take their places. When the wreat factory shots down, the work ers who inhabited it and gave it life, as thoughts to the brain, go away and it stands there like an empty skull. A few workmen by the force of habit gather ."bout the dosed doors and broken win dows nml talk about distress, the price of food, the coining winter. They are convinced that they have not hail their share of w hat their labor created. They feel certain that the niiicbines inside were not their friends. They look at the mansions of their employer, but have nothing themselves. The employer seems to have enough. Even the employers fail; when they become bankrupt they are better off than the laborers ever were. Their worst is better than the toiler's best. The capitalist comes forward with this specific. He tells the workingmen that he must be economical, and yet, under the present system economy would only lessen wages. Uudcr the great law of supply and demand every saving, frugal, self-denying workinginan is .unconsciously doing what little he can to reduce the compensation of himself ami his fellows. The slave who did not wish to run away helped fasten chains on those who did. So the saving mechanic is u certificate that wages are high enough. Does the great law demand that every worker should live on the least possible amount of bread? Is it his fate to work for another? Is that to be his only hope, that and death? Capital has always claimed, and still claims, the right to combine. Manufacturers meet and determine prices even in spite of the great law of supply and demand. Have trie laborers the same right to combine? The rich meet in the bank, clubhouse or parlor. Work ingnien, when they combine, meet in the street. All the organized forces of society are against them. Capital has the army and the navy, the Legislature, the judicial and executive departments. When the rich combine it is for the purpose of "exchanging ideas." When the poor combine it is a "conspiracy." If they act in con cert, if they really do something, it is a "mob." If they defend themselves it is "treason." How is it the rich control the depart ments of government? In this country the political power is equally divided among them. There are certainly more poor by his master, turned dusty roads, leans hia deserted into the head on the topmost rail, looks at the donkeys in the tield of clover, and feels like a nihilist. In the days of cannibalism the strong devoured the weak actually ate their Hesh. In spite of all laws' that man has made, in spite of all advances in Bcience, Thig policy of assessing property at something like ite real valve anp lowering the tax rate accord ingly is unquestionably the cor rect way, provided this reform is carried out all through the county and the heavy taxpayers of the county aie not permitted to dodgw taxes as they have done for so many years. The Pioneer has been advocating this reform in the strong, the heartless, still live ; taxation, for the reason that our on the weak, the unfortunate thejtax rate, while low when the low foolish. True, they do not eat valuation of property is taken into their liesh or drink their blood, consideration, yet appears to lie but they live on their labor, their very high to investors coming into self-denial, their weariness and this section of country and who want, The poor man who-de. re not familiar with the past, forms himself by toil, who labors methods of assessing property at for his wife and children through j from a fourth to a third of its all his anxious, barren, wasted value. Mr. Lafollette says that there is considerable complaint in this section over the assessment of lands at practically 50 pef cent increase over their last assessment, but he thinks the objection will cease when it. is found that the tax levy is lowered correspondingly, and that taxes have not been in creased, Madras Pioneer. Columbia Southern Has Trouble. life who goes to the grave with out ever having a luxury has been the food of others. He has been devoured by his fellownien. The poor woman living in the bare and lonely room, cheerless and . tireless, sewing night and day to keep starvation from her child, is slowly being eaten by her fellownien. When I take into consideration the agony of civi lized life the failures, the anx iety, the tears, the withered hopes, the bitter realities, the hunger, the crime, the humiliation, the scheme I am almost forced to say that, canibalism, after all is the most merciful form in which man has ever lived upon his fel low -man. It is impossible for a man with a good heart to be satisfied with world as it is now. No man can truly enjoy even what he earns what he knows to be his own knotting that millions of his fellownien are in misery and want. When we think of the famished, we feel that it is almost heartless to eat. Ti meet the ragged and shivering makes one almost ashamed to be well dressed and warm one feels as though his heart was us cold as their bodies. In a world tilled with millions and millions of acres of land wait ing to be tilled, where one man can raise the food for hundreds, millions are on the edge of famine. Who can comprehend the stupidity at the bottom of thif. truth. Is there to be no change? Are the laws of "snpply and demand," invention and science, monopoly and competition, capital and legislation, always to be enemies of those who toil? Will the workers always be ignorant i enough and stupid enough to give their earnings to the useless? Will the workers support millions of soldiers to kill the sons ot other .I.C.Lewis, who has charge of workmginen.' ' the construction forces of the Des- Will they alw;iys build temales ,.m,es Irrigation A Power Coin ami live in huts and dens 1lioni-j ,uiy, wiih over from Ucdmikml the selves? Will they forever allow jdrst of the week. The company parasites and vampires to live j ml!, iMTII advertising for men and upon their blood? Will they re-' teams for the past two weeks, and j remain the slaves of t he beggars j M r. Lewis states the replies have the lips unstained by lies forever The State Land Hoard, at a meeting held last week, directed the Attorney (ieneral to take steps to compel the Columbia Southern Irrigation Company, to comply with some of the provisions of its contract. The company has refused to adopt rules for distribution of water to settlers that will meet the approval of the board. It also refuses to accept the board' mandate to furnish 1.8 feet of water per acre during the irrigation season. This is the amount which the Deschutes- Irrigation & Power Company agrees to supply under the same climatic and soil condi tions. The board refused to ap prove a lot of applications to purchase land, for the reason that the company would not use blanks prepared under direction of th board. Another order was made direct ing the company to cease selling or offering to furnish water to land outside the segregation. The attorney . for the Water Users' Association was notified, of the board's action to protect rights of settlers. This means that dif ferences between the board and the company will be threshed out in the courts. D. I. & P. Co's Ditch Work Begins. 0 The Smith Premier Typewriter Co., 247 Stark Street, Portland, Oregon Ely's Cream Balm This Remedy la a Specific, Sure to Cive Satisfaction. CIVES RELIEF AT ONCI. It elnan-x'H, iinothes, liealx, and protwtn Oin ilisciw-d iimmlirane. it cures Catarrh awl drives away a t'M in th Jloail quieklr. Kestorcs the Seines of Taste and Smell. 1 jtsy to use. Coutaina no injitrioua lrntf-. Applied into the nostril and absorbed. Ijirge Size, 50 cents at Druggists or by ' niiiil; Trial Size, 10 cents by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Wrr St, Ntw York, chine,.? ,1 . u 'i i ii .i ' i u.n ...... n3 S...M.M. r.-n; ,, , . swamped the clerical forces at control? Whysbonld no. support ,11 bo, net, MUud th, crs combine for .the purpose of , -tup fr u.l ! ,11 industry ... the lut controll.ng the executive, (he leg-1 presence of crowned idleness for- ,lt,,,, wei,. ,,!ilIns (r nien to islat.ve and the judicial depart- j ver fMn upon its knees and will j j ,nt! ,.m,.itv and that out ments? Will they ever iind how j ,. u1Htiil.,, bv lies forever side hell, would" have to be en- powerful they are A cry eome,;ki(!i ior, listed. The company this year j from the oppressed, from the bun- j Ils, decided to employ in construe- !pry, from the downtrodden, from ; 1 tion work as many of the teams i the unfortunate, from the despised, -- 'belonging to the actual settlers fro.n the men who despair, and- Hoyt Is Gaining ! under the canals as is possible to jfron, women who weep. There get, and work will also be given to lare times when mendicants he-, (,;im,. ,;(U. (,r those settlers under the company's conic revolutionists when a rag j " ,i,tni,,.- -lw, ..r., .,t l ;!..., t .k; !,,s a banner, under which is now coined - l.U , U at this ' the noblest and bra v,t battle for j to be t he strong man for the oll.ee. . wiu r'1,t- ',hlK 't-l fr fro... the' ,imi t)i( w(ik (if Mti,n(Hng Can these forces of nature bo j f..l(.t lhat ,,e ,M.0pl throughout! the laterals of the Pilot Butte cont rolled for the benefit of her the t-tate appreciate fully his i canal in the vicinity of Uedmo.ul ; suffering children? Will extrava- j policy in holdin" state funds on ! H,"l l;l,,,r on, as soon as the pre- ' gam-e keep pace with ingenuity? ; deposit in the counties wherein Will the woikingineii become in- , (hey are collected, instead of draw-telIi--i.t enough and strong ' ,nf! them to one common center, enough to become owners, of ma-; w, id, has been the custom here- Will these giants, these 1 tofore. sent urgent work is completed, the Central t tregon canal, which has been finished as far as the old river bed, will be extended so as to provide water for the settlers ip he region around Powell Buttes.