j I l WILSON'S VIEWS GIVEN JOJJATION Inaugural Address of the New President. DEFINES PEOPLE'S DUTY. First Obligation of Law U to K tp So cioty Sound by Sanitary and Puro Food Statutoa and Meaeurea Deter mining Conditions of Labor Task No Moroly Ono of Politic. Washington. March 4. The inaugural address of President Wood row Wilson Is as follows; There has ln oh.ince uf ewero menl It bean two years spo. rbe,u tbe house uf representatives became Democratic by a derisive majority. It has now been completed. The seonte bout to assemble will also be IViuo cratlc. The otth-es of president ami Tice president hnve been put Into the hands of lVinotmts. What dis tbe change meant That Is the question that is uppermost iu our minds today. That Is tbe question I am going to try to answer, in order, If t may, to Inter pret the occasion. It means much mors than tbe mere success of party. The success of a party means little except when tbe nation is using that party for a large and definite purpose. No one can mis take the purpose for which the nation bow seeks to ae tbe Democratic party. It seeks to use It to interpret a change In Its own plans and point uf view. Some old things with which we had, frown familiar aud which had begun to creep into the very habit of our thought and uf our lives hare altered their aspect as we have latterly looked critically upon them with fresh, awak ened eyes; have dropped their disguises and shown themselves alien and sin ister. Some new things ss we look frankly upon them, willing to compre hend their real character, hare come to assume tbe asict of tilings long be lieved Id and familiar, stuff of onr own convictions. We have been refreshed by a new insight into our own life. Our Model Government. We see that In many tbings life is very great It is Incomparably great In Its material aspects, in its body of wealth. In tbe diversity and sweep of Its energy. In the industries which have been conceived and built up by tbe genius of Individual men and tbe lim itless enterprise of groups of men. It Is great also, very great, in its moral force. Nowhere else in tbe world have noble men and women exhibited In more striking forma tbe beauty and the energy of sympathy and helpful ness and counsel in their efforts to rec tify wrong, alleviate suffering aud set the wesk in the way of strength and hope. We have built up. moreover, a great system of government, which has stood through a long age as In many respects a model for those who seek to set lilerty upon foundations that will endure against fortuitous change, against storm and accident Our life coutalus every great thing and contains It iu rkh abundance. But tbe evil has come with tbe good, and much flue gold has been corroded. With riches has come Inexcusable waste . We have squandered a great part of what we might have used and have not stopied to conserve the ex ceeding bounty of nature without which our genius for enterprise would bare been worthless and Impotent, scorning to be careful, shamefully prodigal as well as admirably efficient We have been proud of our industrial achievements, but we have not hith erto stopped thoughtfully enough to count the human cost, the cost of lives snuffed out. of energies overtaxed and broken, tbe fearful physical and spir itual cost to tbe men and wumen and children upon whom the dead weight and burden of It all has fallen pitiless ly the years through. The groans and agony of it all had not yet reached our ears, tbe solemn, moving under tone of our life, coming up out of tbe mines and factories and out of every home where tbe struggle bad Its inti mate and familiar seat With tbe great government went many deep se cret things which we too long delayed to look Into and scrutinize with can did, fearless eyes. The great govern ment we loved has too often been made use of for private and selfish purposes, and those who-used it had - forgotten the people. Duty of Americans Outlined, At last a vision has been vouchsafed us of our life as a whole. We see the bad with the good, the debased and decadent with the sound and vital. With this vision we approach new af fairs. Our duty is to cleanse, to re consider, to restore, to corre-t the evil without Impairing the good, to purify and humanize every process of our common life without weakening or sentimentalizing It. There has been something crude and heartless and un feeling in our haste to succeed and be great. Our thought tins iieen, "Let ev ery man look out for himself; let ev ery generation look out for Itself." while we reared giaut machinery which made It lniossitle that any but those who stood at the levers of control should have a chance to look out for themselves. We hud not forgotten onr morals. We remembered well enough that we had set up a policy which was meant to serve tbe humblest as well as the most Mwerful. with an eye single to the standards of Justice and fair play, and remembered it with pride. But we wore very needless and In a hurry to be greiu. We have come now to the sober sec ond thought. The scales of heedless ness have fallen from our eyes. We have made up our ml mis to square ev ery process of onr national life again with the standards we so proudly set up at the beginning aud have always carried at our hearts. Our work la a work of restoration. Things to Bo Accomplished, We have Itemised with some degree of particularity the things that ought to he altered, aud here are soiimi of tbe chief items: A tariff which ruts us off from uur imiper wrt Iu the comuterce of- the world, violates the Just princi ples of taxation aud make the govern meut a facile Instrument In the bunds of private Interests; a banking and cur rency system based upon the necessity of the government to sell Its bonds fifty years ago and rfectly adapted to con centrating cash and restricting credits; an Industrial system which, take It on all Its sides, financial as well as ad ministrative, holds capital In leading strings, restricts tbe liberties aud lim its tbe opportunities of labor aud ex ploits without reuewing or conserving the natural resources of the country; a body of agricultural activities never yet given the etilcleucj of great busi ness undertakings or served as it should be through the Instrumentality of science taken directly to the farm or affoplvd the facilities of credit best tuilol In Its practical ueeda; water courses undeveloped, waste places un reclaimed, forests un tended, fast dis appearing without plan or prospect of renewal, unregarded waste heaps at every mine. We have studied as per haps no other nation has tbe most ef fective means of production, but we have not studied cost or economy aa we should either as organisers of In dustry, as statesmen or aa Individuate. Society's Duty to Itself. Nor hare we studied and perfected the men us by which government nay be put at tbe service of humanity In safeguarding tbe health of the nation. tbe health of Its men and Its women aud its children, as well aa their rights in tbe struggle for existence. This is no sentimental duty. Tbe firm basis of government Is Justice, not pity. Those are matters of Justice. There can be no equality or opportunity, tbe first essential of Justice Iu tbe body politic. if men and women and cbllldren be not shielded In their lives, their very vitality, from tbe consequences of great industrial and social processes which mey cannot alter, control or singly cope with. Society must see to It that it does not itself crush or weaken or damage iu own constituent parts. The j Jewish charities is in excellent first duty of law is to keep sound the i dition for ,aki care of in. soclaty It serves. Sanitary laws, pure i . . . food laws and laws determining con-j coming Jewish Immigrants, in dltions of labor which Individuals are his opinion. The society in New powerless to determine for themselves j York last year directed 74 immt are intimate parts of the very bust-' , . . n ness of Justice and legal efficiency. j grants who were bound for Port .These are some of the things we, land. The Jewish population in ought to do and not leave the others portland is estimated at 8000. nnHnnA lha nisi faohliinoil nAVno , frvA t neirlected. fundamental afetuarriln. r and of individual right j high enterprise of the new: of property This Is the itnv. To lift avimililns thut jM,ti..,irna our'life as a nation to the light that ually ,0 "ssimilate American cus- shines from the hearth fire of every toms, with due regard to the mans conscience and vision of the ideals that he may bring to Am right It Is Inconceivable we should do ' tv, t this as partisans; It la Inconceivable we j er,ca Wltn B,m- 1 should do It in ignorance or the facts Mr. Bero holds that immigra- as they are or In blind hnste. We shall fl0W8 toward tbe opportune restore, not destroy. We shall deal;.. ..... . , with our economic system as it Is and t:es lt holds out for ,,,e Pr08PeC ss It may be modified, not as It might live immigrant along tbe lines ot be if we had a clean sheet of paper activity that the State places the shall make it what it should be, ln the spirit yf those who question their own wisdom and seek counsel and knowledge, not shallow self satisfac tion or the excitement of excursions wbitber tbey cannot tell. Justice, and only Justice, shall always be our motto. Task Not Merely One of Politics. And yet it will be no cool process of mere science. The nation has been deeply stirred-stlrred by a solemn pas sion, stirred by tbe knowledge of wrong, of Ideals lost, of government too often debauched and made an in strument of evil. The feelings with which we face this new age of right and opportunity sweep across our heartstrings like some air out of God's own presence, where Justice aud mercy are reconciled and the Judge aud the brother are one. We know our task to be no mere task of politics, but a task which shall search us through and through, whether we be able to under stand our time aud tbe need of our people, whether we be Indeed their spokesmen and Interpreters, whether we have tbe pure heart to comprehend and tbe rectified will to choose our blgb course of action. This is not a day of triumph; It is a day of dedication. Here muster not the forces of party, but the forces of humanity. Men's hearts wait upon us: men's lives hang In the balance: men's hopes call upon ns to say what w will do. Who shall live up to the great trust? Who dares fall to try? I sum mon all honest men. all patriotic, all forward looking men. to my side. !od helping me. 1 will not fall them If they will but counsel and sustain me. The Drama of London's Fog. There Is a whole world of drama bound up In the chronicles of London's fog. This misty and mysterious vis itant, far older than I log or Magog, which used to visit the watches of the night when the metropolis barely lifted Itself out of the surrounding marshes, has a fund of comedy as well as trag edy. Countless murders have been committed under Its sheltering cloak, men aud women have been waylaid, children have been torn from their moi'.iers and wires from their bus bands. -London Strand. Jews Coming to Central Oregon "The tendency among the Jew ish immigrants to the United State to go back to the land la becoming more and -more appar ent each year," sttya Stanley He rn ist rV ti..k t,.i. ..:.... and Aid Society of New YorK who is in fortland investigating conditions here with a view to stimulating organisation and pre - r p rat ion (or tbe immigration to the Pacidc roast in coining years. says (Le Oregonian. "Here in Portland I have found 50 families that are prepared at d will soon go to Cential Oregon to make their homes on the land; and another group is also form- ing for the purpose of going to found an agricultural Colony Somewhere tlse in the State, it.. , . , They are not poor people and thee will be able 10 establish and maintain themselves upon farms with no material aid from char ities or similar organizations they go on the land independent. The fact that they are abandon ing their present pursuits to take . . . i . , , . . to the soil indicates that they are striving to become once more what the Jewish people were or iginally an agricultural people. ''Tbe iPanama canal will un doubtedly bring to you a vastly increased amount of freight," continued Mr. Bero, "but I am doubtful if the human freight will increase at once to great pro portions. Those who are here already and are sending for friends and relatives will prob ably prefer to have them come to the Atlantic ports and make the trip across the continent, even though the cost of passage may be a trifle greater." The local organ izition of the "1 he aim Of OUT WOrH iS tO Ibad tbe Jewish immigrant, by kindly and sympathetic handling, graft- most emphasis upon in its adver tising. Irrigated Land for Rent. Improved irrigated land for rent in Powell Butte district. Apply to tl. A. McKarlane, Redmond, Ore. 2 13 tf If PI V k,ll!e meets everyTues. day night. Strangers welcome. Gko, Nom-K. N ; ; V i.; T. L. Coon, Sec. die, Trreas Burt C. B. Barnrs, Di.vwid- Notice for Publication. Department of the Interior, C. 8. Land Olllce St The Dalles, Orrirno, February , yotice Is hereby Riven that George II. Ketlllf of Prineville. Oregon, who. on January 10th. 1WU, male Homefttefl No. 05"M Slid aililltfoiisl No OlrTi, (or sw4 and lot 2, section fly, town- hip 16 south. rsilKS loeut Willamette Merid ian, has tiled notice ol Intention to make flnal three year proof to establish claim to the land above deacrlbed before Timothy K. J. Duffy, 1 . B. Commissioner, St his office at Prlnevllle, Oregon, on the 6th day ol April, 1913. IHafmant names as witnesses: Harry Van Meter, Frank hands, Jacob Recker, Kruest C. Klmmell, ell ol i'rinevllle, Oregon. 84 C. W. MOOKK, Register. I have three sworn enemies the drunkard, heavy drinker, and the man who craves rough, strong, high-proof whiskey Cyrus Noble Bottled at drinking strength W7J. Van Schuyver & Company, Agents, Portland , Shoe Repairing. Hi tit", the Shoe liepslrer, is located In tlrpt bulletin south of (H iioco brnlne, on east aide o( Main street, t'rinevill. Men's shoes ball soled with So. I leath er lor IK) cen i e per pair, ladies' i0 renti pel pair, r-atislsilion misranteed. t 1.1 Imp Notice ol I'lMnl Settlement. Notice is hereby given, be the under signed, the administrator of toe estate ol (ieorgo W. Ilarnee, deceased, that he ', lis i niS'io and tiled with tbe county accounting of hta administration of said ir?'!.V, r'? "i T! ! the ?th dr of April, 11113, at 10 o rlock in the forenoon, at the county court- 1 "T ,in ,.rtnfvlll- "";" ''"' m llce lot liesni'i and tettllng .aid flnsl accounting. At hlih said lime and place any person Interested in said rstitemajr aipier and object lo raid H al accounting. Iatvd this Will day ol Kebruarv, 191.1 WlLllAM II. IUaK, Administrator ol the estate ol (leortr W. Uarues, deceased. X '.7p Micriira Stile of Real Kstuto. Ur virtue of an execution ami order j ' sale Issued out ol the circuit court of 0B the lUth dav ol February. lll:L uiou a decree and order of sale entered Id said court on the "1st dav ol October, m3 , , ,tlil herein "M. K. Kllu.it was plaintiff and W. K. Ha.niner and ratitn- Hammer ami K 1.. batnn were defendants, judgment was enteied in favor of the platoon and against the de fendants, U.K. Hammer and Fannie H.imuier (or the sum ol One Thousand Ninety eight, two hundreths dollars, with interest thereon at the rate ol ten per cent per aunniii from the 3Uh dav of August t ; 1 "J, I am commanded to 11 1..I1.... i . I 1 fru ma mil. him ur-n. ( 1 1 I r-ei eemii .i,,,,, ln ,h, cu..t, ol Cr. state f Oregon, to it : The east ball of tl southwest quarter, the north! quarter of the southwest quarter ol sec tion thirteen and the northeael quarter of the southeast quarter ol section four teen iu township twelve south, of range thirteen east of Willamette Meridian. I will on Satarc.y, tUZ2.ei.jef Mercs, 1913, at two o'clock in the afternoon, at the front door of the couniy courthouse in I'm eville, Oregon, sell to the Inglieet bidder for rash, subject to coiiflrnmtion by the said court, all the right, title and interest ol the said W. F. Hammer and Fanny Hammer and K I.. Sibm in and to saiil, above deocrilied premieee, or so much thereof aa shall be tutlicient to satisfy the judgment of plaintiff and the costs ol Disking aaiil sale. lated this 2ilth dav of Feb-uary, 11111. Fsank Kl.KINB, Sheriff. By D. II. Peoplee, deputy. Notice to Creditor. Notice la hereby given by the un dersigned, the nilmliilstrntor of the estate of l.nrklu Weaver, deceased, to the creditors of an Id eatnte anil all iiernotie having; claims ngnlust the sh me to present such claims to the undersigned at the olllce ot M. K Elliott In I'rliievllle. Oregon, within six months from the first publica tion of this notice. Dated this 23rd dnr of .Inn.. 1913. David Weavkb. Administrator of the estate ol I ar Hoti, Larkln Weaver, decensed. c of AdininiHtralor'a Sale of Kcal Kstutc. In the county court ol the state of Oregon for the county ol Crook. In the matter ol the estate of John II Jarrett, deceased. Notice is hereby given thai under anil by virtue ol a decree and order of sale ot real estate made and entered In the county com t of the state of Oregon lor ('rook county, on the Mih day ol Febru ary, lltl.'t, in I lie above entitled matter, authorising, empowering aud directing me to do ro, I w ill on the lSth say of March, 1913, in front of the front door of the court bn'tse in 1'rineville, Crook conalv, state of Oregon, at the hour of IU o'clock in the forenoon of said day, sell at public auction to the highest bidder tor cash in hand, all the following described real e-iats Is-longing to the estate of John II. Jarrett, deceased, and all the rivht, title snd interest tbe said .lohn II. Jar rett had, at the time of Ins death, in and to I tie following described real property, to wit: Lois 3 and 4 and the south half of the northwest quarter of section 6 in township 14 south of range 11) east of the Willamette Meridian in Crook county, state of Oregon, and con taining one hundred and fifty-three and 84-100 acres, in one parcel and altogether, to satisfy the spproved claims against taid estate and the ex peneee of the administration. This notice is published in the Cro ik County Journal of rVineville, Crook county, Oregon, for four weeks by order of the Hon, O. Springer, Judge of the above entitled court. Dated this 12th day of February, 1913. 2-13 L. M. Bbciitkix, Administrator of the estate of John H. Jarrett, deceased. Low Fares West SPRING COLONIST PERIOD Daily, March 15 to April 15 To All Central Oregon Points ON Chicago Peoria St. Louis Milwaukee) ., Little Rock . . Memphis .... New Orleans. $38.00 . 37.00 . 37.00 36.70 . 42.50 . 42.50 . 48.05 Tell your friends in the east ol the opisirtunitY of moving west at low rate. Nrect train service via llnrllnglon Home, Northern TailHc, 1 1 rest Northern. Spokane, 1'orlland A Seattle and tlrrgnu Trunk Hallways. You can deswit fundi with me au I weal bound tickets will lie furnished people in the east. 2 Kill W. D. SKINNER, Traffic Manager. Portland, Ore. Details Will be Supplied on Request H. Baukol, Aft. Red mo n THE HAMILTON STABLES J. H. WIOLC, Proprietor I'KINKVII.I.K. OKF.;ON Stock boarded by the day, week or month at Reasonable rates. Reme oilier us when in Prineville, Rath Hkasonabi.ic. We have Fine Livery Rigs For Rent Statement of Resources and Liabilities of , The First National Bank Of Prineville, Oregon RKSUt' '(CM Loans au4 Discounts,. fl.! OS United HUU Bonds 11.600 00 Hank f remlseaurte UW 13 Cash a bne (Tons tanks 30,tM M IM It I. P. AOea. Presfstesa WUI WaraweftM, Vlee frasUeal Crook County Bank PRINEVILLE, ORECON l '!( 4'7mitQ iim M.4JI.T8 lans, Overdraft HMnkluf House . Cunli sua MeneL.se Total. ... SUS.V70.M W. A. Booth, Pres. D. f. Btswart, Vloe-Prea, U, A. Hootn, Assistant Cashier Express and Passenger Stage Line Three hours between Redmond and Trlm-vlHe., Inn $1.50. Airent lor Nurtehni. lit. Northern and American Express? Co. Otllee open from 7 a. m to 6 p. in.; Hunday 9 to 1 :.'I0. Olllce ut Pioneer Cream uo. 12-19 CENTRAL 0REG0H LINE FROM St. Paul ... Minneapolis . Duluth Kansas City Omaha St. Joseph . . . Lincoln $30.00 . 30.00 . 30.00 . 30.00 . 30.00 . 30.00 . 30.00 I.UIIIUTIKS 'capital Mtnrk.pelil In ,. SD.M OS Humlus lun.1, esrasd, &u.on 00 tlndlrldod proate. earned .TM M Orculalluo Moo 00 liepoelia ,UM" u T. M. sUlaVia. Caskie, a BeMsHew Ass't Cashier uaeuiiwe '"spitai paid III full Murplus !!n.iii.irdprofju UePue'ls Uekllllles sssrwoo , jt.tmu.ts) T.ats.o 1M,W7.SS rjU,97t).5 C. M. r.l.lse.CsbUr Jourdan & Son ...,... .