l -3 1 A i FOSTER & HORIGAN DEALERS IN Choice Beef, Veal, Mutton and Pork. Fish, Game and Vegetables in season. After January 1st we will have a stock sufficient for all needs of our Home Cured Bacon and Hams. Bring Us Your Country Produce Wo can handle any amount of Country Eggs and liuttcr. The highest market price paid for country produce of all kinds. Call on us for prices on beef by the quarter or shank. We will make the price right. FOSTER & HORIGAN FAIR ASSOCIATION Hats, Shoes and Clothing A complete line of Gent's Furnishings at Trices that you can afford to pay. Call in and let us show you the goods and quote you our prices. A Choice Line of Cigars & Tobaccos Tl stockholder of the Central Ongon Livestock A Agricultural Association met in J'rinevill Mon day to elect directors and transact other business that niiht prorerly come before the meeting. Th fol lowing directors were elected for tht ensuin year: T. 11. I.afollett, Champ Smith and O. Springer. The following officers of the as sociation were chosen: T. H. La follett, 'resident; Champ Smith, vice-president; M. 1. Bijijis, secre tary; C5. Springer, treasurer. The stockholder were much pleased with the reports of the fair officials and with the progress made last year. The association is virtually out of debt and plans were formulated to aiake the liH)7 fair the best ever held in Central Oregon. With the burden of in debtedness removed that has hung over the association in the past the hands of the officials are left free to offer premiums and hang up racing purses that will stimulate ana encourage our livestock men and fanners to do their utmo.-t. An effort is being made to place the association in the regular state circuit, which, if successful, will add $1000 to the agricultural premiums. The new pavilion that was built last vear will be doubled in ca pacity this year. The grand stand will be covered and otherwise lm proved. The race track is to le improved and othtr conveniences made for the co.nfort of the public. An order was spread upon the minutes granting the baseball boys the privilege of using tlw fair grounds when not in use by the association. Baseball games am! tournaments will hereafier be held at that (dace where the accommo dations will be ample to meet all requirements. THE OWL CASH STORE R. B. ADAMS, Proprietor 1 One n : cop ti on SMITH & CLEEK, Proprietors Domestic and Imported Liquors, Wines and Cigars COUNTRY ORDERS SOLICITED MAIN STREET ye Post Otiice Box 92 PRINEVILLE, OREGON . . THE HAMILTON STABLES T. F. BUCHANAN, Proprietor PRINEVILLE, OREGON Stock boarded by the day, week or month at Rea-onable rates. Remember us when in Prineville. Rates Reasonable. We have Fine Livery Rigs For Rent arsti r. i he -.lies iy is f series K. II. WKHEK, Proprietor, The Dalles, Oregon GROWER AND DEALER IX FRUIT. SHADE iPga B- GRAPE VINES ORNAMENTAL 1 tf W SMALL FRUITS Evergreens, Riue and Shrubbery, Hyacintht, Tulips, Lilliet, Dahiliai, Peoniet, Etc. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE, IT IS FREE Remember our Trees are Grown Without Irrigation P. B. POINDEXTER, Agent PRINi;VIU,i:, OREGON' ife 35r?fi2Ei35 ETraErjrTTrHSS hail Ih (ore Imvh male by lb-- Fol-i .iral ..!, rtj ! t I , ... !,., .li..trii'l MEETING'01"' ,lul" v,,,lf 'ut hoik m inese inii'i lerrs 111 uiri slightest with the tight of the United Stte t inctitule civil action nguindt tnpaer violntinjt the (jrnninn regulation, or with chrping thp graiing fee. The United Sttes Circuit Court of Ay jel!i for the Ninth Circuit decided definitely, in the eaie of litorvi!- nw v. l nile.t Mtei, tlwt the pro visions of th act of March 4, 1807, delegating to the Secretary the power to mak regulations, is con stitutional, that the regul Uion pro- llihiting the p.turing of fhe p on forest reserve without a permit ix valid, and that the Federal courts will enforce the regulation hy in junction. The Supreme Court of Ariiona, three judge fitting, in the case of Dent v. United Slate (76 Pacific Reporter, 45.) went still further, under circumstance which made the division most em phatic. DtMit wa criminally prostH'uted for grating sheep on a forest reserve without a permit, in violation of the regulation, and the court had held that hi act wa not a crime; hv:t a eoon the Dustervignes case wa decitletl lor the Government the Arixona court granted a rehearing of tin- IV nt case and held that the Dus- tervignea decision wn binding on all court in the Mnlli I ircuil in criminal a well a civil case, and that iVnt wa therefore guilty of crime. So far, therefore, the court de cision an to the criminality of trespass contrary to the fores t-rv erve regulation are conflicting. rinal adjudication of the nmt can not lm had until the ruling ot a higher court ha been pecured; but no court ha questioned thr iff fh A(Ji:ms for mn n-iucK i.vni:uNS;uui tiii: di:i.im:atou rn rlj ' ' 'n .'..U..1.H.. ,1,1)11 in i i... i i ..,,,,..--,,, . ... , Kt Wa Will fAll Our Fnflro I Ino rf I nrllac CI n Qkrvaa nl if wZtif rl I ' v uvu vui ( v tiitv u i juuiv t itiv uuuva at, uuuui p(J To Make Room for a Full Line of the Well Known jj Grazing Fees Will be Collected On Resenres. A recent decision of a Federal judge has !een widely commented upon throughout the West on thet supposition that it declared illegal the regulation of grazing on forest reserve and the system of charg ing- for grazing permits. As a matter of fact, the decision, which was handed down by Judge Whit son, ot the united Mates district Court for eastern t Washington, in the case of the United States vs. Matthews, has no bearing what ever upon the legality o' the graz ing regulations or of grazing fees, which stand precisely a before. The legal question involved was simply this: Does the law author izing the Secretary of Agriculture to issue regulations make the breach of those regulations a crime? Judge Whitson's decision mere ly answered this question "No." It was in substance that the ob jection to the indictment against Walter Matthews was the absence of a law defining the act therein charged as a criminal offense. Upon that ground the court held that the demurrer must be sustain- right of the Secretary of Agricul ture to make regulation and to re cover damage for trespass through civil action. (razing trespasser will b re strained from violation of the regu lations by injunction proceeding and sued for civil damage untd the higher court shall have reach ed a decision a to the criminal character of such trespasses. The Forest Service will continue to ex dude unpermitted slock from all lorest reserves and to collect grz- mg fees for alt stock under periuil Advertise Oregon. Portland, Oregon, Jan. 7lh, 1907 bailor Journal Never at any time since Oregon became a state has there been such widespread in leresi in ner development, as is evidenced by the letters received from all parts of the United States by the Oregon Development League. President T. B. Wilcox, of tin State League, has just authorized an increase in the advertising in thoroughly reliable agricultural publications of large circulation These adveitisements are devoted exclusively to the agricultural lands of the state, for it is an in creased farm population that Ore gon needs more than all else com bined. Put energetic farmers on the vacant lands, cut up the large ranches Hnd the cities, towns and villages of Oregon will grow and prosper. With that end in view uregon is Deing advertised as never before, and the inquiry is three times as great as it was dur ing the Lewis & Clark Exposition Many communities of the State are sending out literature to in- HALF PRICE 85 J-- -- SOROSIS SHOE FOR WOMEN ThCM:are the bcMiVdlucs Ever Offered from a (j(M)d (lean Stock. Regular value at , il.55 Regular flfiO values go at .. , it. 95 Regular $ 1.00 value g at C2.45 Regular $i AO values go at ....... i2.75 There are also a few Urokeit Lines in small izen from -J to 4 which will lie. jdaml on our eounters frf ami markeil in plain llgures at less tlian tme-lialf their value. This is Our Usual time. to Clean Up. Big Jj2 Bargains are Best and Thickest Here Now t0 N i. lit . I i- 1 nan r Ladies, Waists Jl A few sizes from our large HJ Fall Stock at ono-half "I riee for this sale. Misses ami Children's f&Z Caps, (Vw kinl for, I'hj m .V kind at .V Flannelettes The same (trades that sold for I'm, JOe and L'oe will go at this sale for 10c, 15c and 20c Pillow Tops hi 'tie line at 25c 7."kj line at 40c Pill 25c, 35c and 50c 8WUR ZWEILE & CO. IMUM-VILU:, OHlUiON f3 jsjSjB O I ceqoe mm Ml Off ICtRS: W. A. Booth, Prtldnt O. M. Elkini, Vic Prldnt Futo W. Wilom. Chlr 0IRECTOB8: W. A. Booth, O. M. Elkin, O. f. 8tiitt. Frio W. Wiion. ! Transacts n Ciem-ral Hanking Husinn E x c h a n k e nought and Sold Collection will re ceive prompt attention Ejf5ET3fj All I 4Lk CL1 1 1 . .i f l V r m n t l . i n ed and the defendant discharged. , urnii,hed l() eacn and every one f)( Though the point was simple j the sixty-three organizations com and clear enough, it was entirely : posing the Oregon Development misconstrued in the press reports ! League. Letters of inquiry are of the nVriinn and in pditnrial coming in many languages ng comments upon it. For instance, in the Wyoming Tribune of Tues day, Novemler 6, news of Judge Whitson's action was given under the headlines: "Grazing Fees II- f FOR Furniture, Stoves, Ranges, Carpets, Rugs Linoleum, Matting, Lace, Curtains, Win dow Shades and Poles, Wall Paper Lincrusta, Doors, Windows, Transoms Paints, Oiis, Glass, Hardware, Cooking Utensils, Wash Machines, Churns, Etc., go to and save from ' A l T MAW & t 10 to 20 cents on Every Dollar lish, German, Swedish and Polish lead; letters are coming from every state in the Union, but Minnesota, Iowa, Kansas, Wisconsin, the Da kotas, and Nebraska, are about equal in number, and it is from 1 itiut tliAo i.Avlionu 4tf - TTr iiil egal Dec.desFederalJudge.'.'and!, that e ant Qur immi. the article declares that "As a re-1 gration. An accurate conception suit of the decision, Matthews, : of the enormous correspondence who entered the Mount Rainier can b,Ht ,,f! had from the fact that Forest Reserve without the p(.r. f cost 527 00 to pay the outgoing . . 'postage for the past twenty-five mit required by the Secretary, is cjav8 frorn the Wstoffice alone, still using the reserve and is not I Remember that it is in January paying the fee imposed by the 'that you get more readers than Secretary." Asa matter of fact,lan.v othe'' month, because the Mr. Matthews' sheep were immedi- ,arrnfer8 in the co,d tions of the . , , . , , country are resting, but February ately removed upon notice by the i8 e1h0' important6' 0ne piece of forest omcers and have not since literature and a personal letter entered the reserve. jsent today are worth more than In the Sheridan, Wyo., Post it ten during the farmer's busy sea is said: "A decision fraught with fion' importance to Vyoming stockmen I . , . , , ' ..... foster & IforlKan have received a is that appearing in this issue, 1 shipment f;i00 boxes of first clnss wherein it is held by the United ,1il',1fH fr"ui ''"t tie which they are ., r . . r, J , , cfferiinr for sale at f 2 ami per States District Court that the col-, box. Also a few boxes of choice ap- lection of fees for grazing livestock ; 'w' ,or 1'nmedlate use at 1.50 1 per is illegal. Since its impo sition this fee has been regarded as illegal and arbitrary by many well-; jj informed Wyoming people, and J the views expressed by the court jj in this decision meet with general J approval here. The litigant, jj is still running his sheep on the J Rainier Reserve without navini? 12-ia-tf Reduction Sale I the fees." Decisions My entire line of Millinery at REDUCED PRICES MRS. ESTES 4 Corner 2nd and Main Street ft like Judge Whitson's WVWV-VW-TVi3 King of All Cough Medicines. Mr. K. (i. 'iw, a muil carrier of Can ton Center, Conn., who has been In the V. S. Service for about nixU-en years, pays! "We have tried in any eolith meiiciii'S forrroiip, but CliarnlM!rluin' Cough Remedy i kii) of all and one to he rflii'd uiion every time. We ali find it the ijest remedy fur coughs anil colds, tiviii certain rtretiltn and leaving no bad lifter effects." For sale by l. 1'. AdaniMin & Co. I Toilet Canes, Mirrors, Vases, A Musical Instruments, Dolls, m liibles and Rooks of all kinds Ih- Suitable for Xmas Presents U jl 2, P. ftdamson d Co. rr lrHtfHf3Er3Erir5Ef2r The Redmond Harness Shop J. H. EH RET, Proprietor, REDMOND, OREGON 2 '6 0 A Complete new line of Harnett, Saddles and other line at uiualiy kept in a first class Harness Shop. There is also in con nection a Boot and Shoe Repair Shop. GIVE ME A TRIAL r jfcenderson 4 Sroilarci Country Orders Solicited Wines and Liquors Finest Cigars In Stock First Door South of the l'oindexter Hotel The Crook County Real Estate Co J r Farms, Timber Lands and Town Property brought and sold. Homesteads and Tim ber Claims Located, xurveyed and estimated Abstracting. Call on or address THIS CROOK COUNTY KFAL FSTATF CO l'rineville, Oregon. 1 THE PLACE TO SAVE MONEY The Leader I. MICHEL, Proprietor THE PLACE TO SAVE MONEY mff -Win We Are Not Closing Out Below Cost Bui we are still old-ring you a large slock ol new dependable merchandise at reasonable prices. We have no shell worn, shoddy goods, and you may rest assured that in dealing wild us you are gelling value received. M f J' J Ql-I.l-rt We have a new up-lo-dale line ol Ladies' in LaaieS OKlr IS Rcady Made Skirls in Shadow Plaids. Plain ' Woolens and Stripes. We carry a new assortment ul Ladies' Coll Gloves, Caps, Fascinators, Bells and Purses. The "Packard Shoe" for Men Every Pair Made to wear The "Julia Marlowe" in Wonen's wear have a (ew equals, but no Superiors. Our Gent's Furnishing Department is complete. Trust & Cos. $3.50 Hat, John B. Stetson Hals at $4.50 and $5.00, in all the latest shapes and colors. Something New and Nobby in Neckwear, Shirts Hose, Caps and Sweaters Aw V 4