5 THE IMPORTED PERCHERON STALLION WW. Eg ffiTHE w 93 LAMONTA PERCHERON HORSE CO. (3 TURCOT No. 56041 Foaled JV1ay 11, 1900; Bred by M. Vallie, Department of Oren, France; Imported April 12, 1905; Property of I I Till Mil0 Mi. Viuui tt I (wu: :ic Pvllk.ic. 7Vf flint: I ott'v rnrwli mif ;nl mii h.lf n Ml I Mini lll. Jiu.wn ill l juu u.J l umirj. ill v nu.i. lvii j iuiiiii, miv mi iiv-iiii mt Mv miles west of Lamonta: at Henrv Montaomen's near Grizzlv P. 0. and at Prmeville L.LI SEASON BEGINS APRIL FIRSTS DESCRIPTION Turcot, is a very Large, Heavy Horse, Jet IJlack, with tine form and superior action; and comes from a long list of Mack Percherons: Weight '2000 pounds more or less according to condition. . Ctiiott. Jfttrny-mt-jCmm iPrnewt, ryon. rtymn. ADDRESS: a 1 ft L. P. H. Co. m LAMONTA, OREGON gj FEES Insurance $20 Due when mare is known to be with foal; $25 due when 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. fN. Milligan, Cha. Lott JERRY ACHEY, President Directors: ) Henry Montgomery I Oscar Cox, Samuel Pierce J. S. McMEEN, Sec. and Treas. I. Win. Sann, Walter Messinger 9fo (Sxtra Charge IT WON'T cost yon an extra cent, to have your printed matter handled in Out-of-tlie- rut, When-you-want-it, and As-vou-like-it Style, if we are permitted to do the work. We give loth dignity and a finish to your Commercial Stationery that you are not in the habit of getting elsewere. jfdded nicety without added cost 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 with the yoods?" Uhe Journal P reaa Wnii Street, 6y OeAoco S&rM&m, JV- n 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 by mechanical experts. hi - -4 .1 The Smith Premier Typewriter Syracuse, N. Y. Branch Stores Everywhere. Co. -4 .?.S--.':.:. Cna,. J". Cdma'd, Jf. IP. 33.1knmr SB el knap dc Cd wards ZPhyt-i'cian and Suryttms. Of,,, frtr mal m iPrintuitlr, Ortyon. t lf. Sfresen&ery !Physician and Surytan C alii Miawm jtrmmjiUy tlaf or nyAt O'fism NW dvmra Mm4 Tjwnptt0n 'a i mHtt 9mtH Strwmta. SPrinevilit, Orayon. MUST SWEAR IN THEIR VOTE small class, while the conditions i of the producers, comparer! with ai the cost of living is scarcely im proved at all? Metal Worker. Water for Agency Plains. Failure to Observe Law Relative to Closing Books Will Cause No Little Inconvenience p. tystctan and Omryton ("ALL ANStt'KHKD PROMPTLY 1AY OR N'lOHT Okkick Oxk Door North ok Adamhon'k IRX li STORK. KKSlDBNl'li Ol'POHITK MKTHOIUST Clil'RCH ZPrintui'He, I. W. SPEAR Joed Stable and ree Camp Jfouaa WHEAT HAY 25 Cts. HEAD H : i y mill (jrain l.'J."i piT day. Triiiisient trade Holicilod. Ciinii- wncte you and your teuniH can lie made oonil'orlalile at tin- old McFarland Stand. Prineville, Or a WARM PROPOSITION Our Hot Water Bags D. P. Adamsjon & Co. jtt A At Jim k. Jk Jim. jJWj Tlx; i1:uh to buy your Host fl Roasts, Steaks, Etc. j, i 4 Is at the O. K. Meat Market p p 'W v V1 "W" U WW w wwn I Star Barber Shop j HYDE it Moll A K, Tifoi-'s. j Our haircutting is up-to-date. Our shaving . is comfortable. Our shop is new and clean. Henderson Building l'RINKVIM.K, - ORKIiON socialist column jxoTAL REGISTRATION IS 1683 The Truth About West Side of the County Sends in Returns Af Dividing Upj ler Clerk's Books Are Closed-Republicans No, Sociulixm does not stand for! Number 1015 with Majority of 491. ( api.uii'sn, stands for dividing j SOME OF THOSE REGISTERED I'tipitulisin compels the indus trious to divide up with the idie. Suppose you are an average worker. l ou work nine or ten hours day. In the first hour or two of your uay s work you produce by your: luhor the amotint you recejve for' the entire day. ' . In another hour or two you pro-j I u i(j f()Ulu, to w u.atkMft lu)(1 duce your proportion of the wear practicable, the plan now under and tear the running excuses, the , (li,0,lssion for gatinj! Wi(ter U1)0ll raw material and the wages of i ak.iov I'lains for all liousehol.t suiK-nntcndcnce. ; domestic purp.ses, liv i.ump- Well, then, having dne this, j lU)( it'up fl,n the di,, wiu it is time for you to take your BOiV(. a vexatious question for the coat and hat and go home to fanww of that district, says the your wife and bahies. Pioneer. At present they ure Do you do it? t hauling water for such purposes, No, you don't. an(l wllile the amount of lim(, con. What do you do? mnml in that manner is not as iou go aneau anil worn the rest Kreat as is lost of the day and add still more to the world's wealth by your labor Who earned that surplus? You earned it. Who gets it? The capitalists get it. You divide up with them. The Social-Democratic party who earned it, shall IkJhA AAA AAAAAAAJ Thoroughbred Plymouth Rocks My chickens are the product of 7 years of painstakiag attention. They are high bred and superior to the average. Eggs $1.00 per setting. JOHN GEIGER, Prineville, . Oregon. CATARR SN coA HtAni says that yon get it. The reason you do not get it now is because a few private individ uals and corporations are permit ted to own the means of produc tion and distribution, and to com pel you to band over to them the bulk of the product of your toil in exchange for the opportunity to earn a bare living. By voting a cnyitalist ticket, the Republican and Democratic ticket, you have extended to the capitalists the pri ilego of exploiting you out of the lion's share of the earninss. The Social-Democratic partv says that the means of production and distribution shall be publicly owned and managed, that exploita tion shall hereby be banished from the earth and the workers shall thereby secure the full product of their toil. No, Socialism does not mean "dividing up. You are now compelled to divide up with the capitalists. You divide with tho lieof Trust. You divide with the Steel Trust. You divide with the Lumber Trust. You divide with the Rubber Trust. You divide with the Hide and Leather Trust. You divide with the Copper Trust, You divide with the Brass Trust the Can Trust, the Paper Trust, the Shoe Trust, the Oil Trust, the Flour Trust, the Woolen Trust, the Cotton Trust, the Sugar Trust, and various othc great as is lost in other localities 0 1 through bad weather, it neverthe- is a ouruen. Necessity has ever been the mother of invention, and out of their need upon the Plains has grown many a plan for getting water up there. None of these have ev-r taken definite form, but the latest plan appears to be the most practical, and is receiving the most serious consideration. Although the details of this plan have not been worked out, roughly outlined it is about as follows: At the U. S. Cowles sawmill on the Deschutes the river runs right under the western edge of the plains and water elevated to the plains at that point could be dis tributed to all other points on the plains. It would requiie a lift of 1100 feet, but a steady stream through a small pipe would afford an ample supply. The plan is to pvt in a turbine wheel at the point on the Deschutes near the mill and with the power that could be developed, to force the water up on to the plains. Wheth er the water can bo forced up with a single lift, or whether it will he necessary to have a series of sta tions or reservoirs, is a matter that will have to be worked out along with numerous other details of the proposed plan. If the plan is found to lie feasible, Mr. Cowles would be assured of the hearty support and co opera tion of all the farmers upon the plains. "It would effectually solve the water question for them, and at a cost much less than individual or even community wells could be drilled and maintained for. Whether the plan will be car ried out as an individual enter prise, or whether it can be o iterated and maintained on a co-operative plan is a feature which will be worked out along with the other Returns received by County Clerk Smith last weekafter he had closed the registration books bring the total registration for Crook county up to IBS:. Out of this number there are 1015 registered Republicans and 524 Democrats, giving the Republicans a majority of 491. There will be a number of those whose names appear on the last papers forwarded to the clerk's otlice who will be compelled to swear in their yoles although their names are on the registration blanks. This is brought about probably through a misunderstand ing of the precinct registration officers relative to the time allowed by law in which to forward regis tration blanks to the clerk. The law provides for the hooks to be closed at five o'clock on April 10. This was done by the county clerk and immediately thererfter be began making up the tally sheets and sending them together with the precinct registration books to the various precincts. ' After a number of these had been for warded, registration blanks were returned by the precinct officers," and in a numberjof instances the clerk was unable to enter the names on the precinct books. Those whose names do not appear on the hooka will be compelled to swear in their votes. Returns received from six pre cincts after the closing of the clerk's records make the total in these precincts as follows, showing an increase of 44 votes over the record as published in last week's Journal: various other oxploiters , (j,.tlliH ,ut it t,mH quit(. ro,a,i and grafters. You divide lip withtjnlt mtt of'tlun plan will one day them. t i come the solution of the water lou have to. What do you think about it. question for Agency Plains. Good Times and Hard,: Must Waive $1 Fee" Total Hep. Dein. Ireland .'5 25 8 llcilmoml (il) lii " Deschutes ii:! :i4 111 Uitillnw 112 51) 21 Ueml (i4 40 24 I lay Creek 2li 17 8 As workingmeti, do we think we have ever had what are called "good times?" What are "good times," any how? As a matter of fact, what sort of times have we had? The following from the United States census reports is a record of the average wage from 1.S50 to 1!)00: Average wage in 1850 was. . . Average wage in 1Mfi() was. . . Average wage in 1870 was. . . con-Tur- 2'.)2 j :?!()! j The State Land Board ferred yesterday with H. D. I ney, president; Jesse Stearncs, 'attorney, and C. M . Itodficld, rcp ; resenting the Dcschut.es Irrigation '& Power Company. They asked i the hoard and the State Kngineer i to certify M,000 acres of the 7i.- iw 'i(K) in the Deschutes Irrigation & rate1 power Company's system, as J ready for patent. Mr. Turney ex $248 plained that it. would be at least a year neiore patents would issue, and in that time the company could comply with reimiremeiits of Average wage in 1880 was. . -. . :!4H , ,,.,, ,, (.Kin,.(.r , Average wage in 18t)0 was. . . . 100 j Intuition of watrr. Average wage in l'.KX) was ... I p) Question arose as to the right of Now take notice that the above I the company to collect both the ('. represents the condition of labor ' per cent interest and the !fl an under free silver and the gold acre maintenance charge, which standard, under high tariff and . begins when the lands are declared .low tariff. While wages show a j reclaimed. This would in effect slight increase fur each decade, j entitle t he compan y to collect the they have absolutely declined equivalent of lfi per cent. when measured by the work done; It was ordered that the company that is. by the values produced, should waive its right to collect ! To illustrate; From 1850 to 1!)(MI this 1 an acre before the bond is our productivity increased tenfold; ' certified for patent. Mr. Turney presented contracts j for two other segregations, one the Pilot Butte segregrtion for 84,000 acres and the other the Oreeon STILL OWNS GRANT Road Company Has Relinquished Only a Few Small Tracts Portland officials, through Dun can Macleod, the local agent for the Willamette Valley fc Cascade Mountain Wagon Road Company, enter a strenuousjdenial of the re port, published in Linn county papers and in this paper a short time ago to the effect that the Wagon Road company had aband oned its holdings in the Cascade along the toll road from Linn to Crook county. Mr. Macleod received a letter from C. K. S. Wood a few davs ago stating that the published re ports which emanated from the county clerk's ollice in Linn county, were "idiotic nonsense." Writing further of the matter be says: "Why should the company give up any of its holdings? We abandoned a few miles of hill road (not toll road) where the county had built a good mad around the hills, which i not traveled any more. If ,t were true that we had abandoned the tracts referred to in the published reports we should have had to notify the authorities in Crook county as well as Linn." Mr. Macleod says, as Mr. Wood's states in the above, that the only holdings which the company has abandoned are a few miles of rocky bill road in eastern Linn county where the county itself built a new road some distance away and over smooth ground, causing the Road company's thoroughfare to fall into disuse. The Smith Premier Typewriter Co, 247 Stark Street, Portland, Oregon Elvs Cream Balm Sure to Clv Satisfaction. Mhe average worker produced in , CIVES RELIEF AT ONCE. l'.HM) ten times as much Wealth as It rleanses, aoothea, hesU, and protwU tlia ivr.ii. l ,,, :., ,i i ,u , ,. diwpd membrane. It cure, fc.tarrl. and ; ln lN'" ,,ut tl,:,t '"" ' Hitliry ilrives away a Ould in the Head qnwklr. ; ot time Ins average wage did not I .rrtu u.nuM Af ' ut. inn hinr- ... KHsytoiw. Coutaina no injurious druy. l Vf,,J double. Irrigation Company for 5H,0(X) ; of lands in the immediate vicinity. Applied into the nnntrUi land absorbed, j What sort of an industrial sys-' acres. The proposed contracts ! Otherwise it still retains its owner i.wil; TrudSize, lOcenUby mail. . tern it ' which the great bulk were referred to the Attorney- ship of the tract throughout the ELY BROTHERS, 58 Wrrn St., N.w York. .of the wealth produced goes to a : General for opinion. Telegram state. Rather than be put at a constant expense to keep an abandoned highway in repair, the company relinquished its right to the grant